Autophagia
Autophagia (eating one's own body) is not classified as a mental disorder or a symptom of a mental disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the diagnostic manual used in the United States. However, autophagia could be classified under the DSM's section "Impulse-control disorders not elsewhere classified". Impulse-control disorders involve failing to resist an impulse, drive, or temptation to perform an act that is harmful to the person or to others. The majority of individuals affected by this disorder will often feel a sense of tension or arousal before committing the act, and then experience pleasure, gratification or relief at the time of committing the act. Once the act has been completed, the individual may or may not feel regret, self-reproach, or guilt.[1]
Autophagia occurs when one is compelled to inflict pain upon oneself by biting and/or devouring portions of one's body. It is sometimes seen with schizophrenia,[2] psychosis and Lesch–Nyhan syndrome.[3]
Similar behavior has been observed in laboratory rats in experiments looking at spinal cord and peripheral nerve injuries. The resulting behavior consists of the rats licking and then chewing their nails, and the tips of their toes. In extreme cases, the rats will chew off whole toes or even the foot.[4][5] In order to get rid of this behavior, researchers applied a series of evaporative, bitter-tasting mixtures (combination of metronidazole and New Skin) on the rat's limb because most animals avoid chewing anything with a bitter taste. After testing this mixture on 24 rats with spinal cord injuries, only one rat had chewed its toes after a two- to three-week period.[6]
People who experience command hallucinations (often associated with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder) are most prone to self-mutilation, including the biting or eating one's own flesh. More examples of people who are very susceptible to severe self-mutilation like autophagia are ones with religious preoccupations, history of substance abuse, and intense social isolation. [7]
See also
- Self-cannibalism
- Trichophagia, eating hair, usually one's own
- Onychophagia, eating fingernails or toenails, usually one's own
- Morsicatio buccarum, eating skin of the inner lip
References
- ^ American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed., text rev.). Washington, DC: Author.
- ^ Koops E, Püschel K (1990). "[Self-mutilation and autophagia]". Arch Kriminol (in German). 186 (1–2): 29–36. PMID 2278506.
- ^ Frost FS, Mukkamala S, Covington E (2008). "Self-inflicted finger injury in individuals with spinal cord injury: an analysis of 5 cases". J Spinal Cord Med. 31 (1): 109–16. doi:10.1080/10790268.2008.11753991. PMC 2435035. PMID 18533422..
- ^ De Medinaceli, L., and R. J. Wyatt. 1988. Local autoimmune reaction and behavioral abnormalities after repeated nerve injury: anexperimental study. Autoimmunity 1:171-182.
- ^ Saade, N. E., L. S. Shihabuddin, S. F. Atweh, and S. J. Jabbur. 1993. The role of previous nociceptive input in development of autotomy following cordotomy. Exp. Neurol. 119:280-286.
- ^ Zhang, Y. P., Onifer, S. M., Burke, D. A., & Shields, C. B. (2001). A topical mixture for preventing, abolishing, and treating autophagia and self-mutilation in laboratory rats. American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, 40(2), 35-36.
- ^ Bhat PS, Pardal PK, Diwakar M. Self-harm by severe glossal injury in schizophrenia. Ind Psychiatry J. 2011;20(2):134-135. doi:10.4103/0972-6748.102524