The Coming of Age of Self-Mutilation
- 1 May 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 186 (5) , 259-268
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-199805000-00001
Abstract
Self-mutilation (SM), the deliberate, nonsuicidal destruction of one's own body tissue, occurs in such culturally sanctioned practices as tattooing; body piercing; and healing, spiritual, and order-preserving rituals. As a symptom, it has typically been regarded as a manifestation of borderline behavior and misidentified as a suicide attempt. It has begun to attract mainstream media attention, and many more who suffer from it are expected to seek treatment. This review suggests that SM can best be understood as a morbid self-help effort providing rapid but temporary relief from feelings of depersonalization, guilt, rejection, and boredom as well as hallucinations, sexual preoccupations, and chaotic thoughts. Major SM includes infrequent acts such as eye enucleation and castration, commonly associated with psychosis and intoxication. Stereotypic SM includes such acts as head banging and self-biting most often accompanying Tourette's syndrome and severe mental retardation. Superficial/moderate SM includes compulsive acts such as trichotillomania and skin picking and such episodic acts as skin-cutting and burning, which evolve into an axis I syndrome of repetitive impulse dyscontrol with protean symptoms.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- The use of pharmacologic pain sensitization in the treatment of repetitive hair-pullingBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1996
- TrichotillomaniaCNS Drugs, 1996
- Violent Theatricality: Displayed Enactments of Aggression and PainTheatre Journal, 1995
- Blood-Letting in Bulimia NervosaThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1993
- Multiple Self-damaging Behaviour among Alcoholic WomenThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1992
- Histrionic Personality Disorder: A Review of Available Data and Recommendations for DSM-IVJournal of Personality Disorders, 1991
- Beta Blockers in Mental Retardation and Developmental DisordersJournal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, 1991
- A Supportive Approach: Psychodynamically Oriented Supportive Therapy–Treatment of Borderline Patients who Self–MutilateJournal of Personality Disorders, 1987
- The Ritual Experience: Pain and the Transformation of Consciousness in Ordeals of InitiationEthos, 1985
- Self‐mutilation in antisocial personality (disorder)Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1976