Symptoms of psychiatric disorders and problems with their assessment.
Part III. Skin picking
KRIZEK G. O.1, HONZÁK R.2,3
1Psychiatr, Washington, DC, USA 2Psychiatrická katedra IPVZ, Praha, vedoucí prof. MUDr. K. Chromý, CSc. 3Ústav všeobecného lékařství 1. LF UK, Praha, přednosta MUDr. B. Seifert |
|
Summary:
The sin picking syndrome, characterized by repetitive, ritualistic, or impulsive skin picking that
lead to unintenional tissue damage and causes significant distress or impairment in daily
functioning, is not yet recognized as a symptom of a distinct ICD-10 or DSM-IV disorder. It is
a chronic disorder with a high rate of psychiatric comorbidity. In ethological terms it is a form
of pathological grooming behaviour and it is also detected in animals.The range of this syndrome
and its clinical consequences are not limited only to psychiatry but extend to other fields of
medicine. The article deals with clinical features and provisional diagnostic criteria of the skin
picking syndrome, differential diagnosis, and existing treatment modalities with, however, only
sparse and inconsistent results.
Key words:
skin-picking - compulsive behaviour - OCD - anxiety disorders - depression -
Prader-Willi syndrome - trichotillomania - Münchhausen syndrome - diagnosis - treatment.
|