Frost Frederick S, Mukkamala Sridevi, Covington Edward
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, Desk C15, 9500 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44195
J Spinal Cord Med. 2008;31(1):109-16. doi: 10.1080/10790268.2008.11753991.
To describe the occurrence of finger autophagia in 5 persons with traumatic spinal cord injury and to present a discussion of putative causes and potential treatments.
Minor self-mutilating actions, such as nail biting and hair pulling, are common in humans and usually benign. In some circumstances, these behaviors are associated with obsessive-compulsive personality traits. In humans, self-injurious biting behaviors are well described in the setting of mental retardation and psychosis and in persons with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Rare cases of human autophagia in persons with intact cognition have been reported, most commonly in the setting of acquired nervous system lesions. After spinal cord injury, it has been suggested that this behavior constitutes a human variant of animal autotomy and a response to neuropathic pain.
Case presentation narrative.
Photographic and radiological study, administration of Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (YBOCS).
In 5 patients with complete tetraplegia, pain in the hands was present in only one instance. The severity of autoamputation varied from minor to extreme. In all cases, damage was confined to analgesic body parts. In 3 cases, autophagia behavior was discovered in progress. Treatments included pharmacotherapy, counseling, and behavioral therapy, with mixed results. All patients were intelligent, willing to discuss their issues, and able to identify conditions of stress and isolation in their lives. Mild preinjury obsessive-compulsive behaviors, such as nail biting, were universal. On the YBOCS, only 1 patient scored in a range indicative of mild obsessive-compulsive symptomatology.
This group exhibited heterogeneous medical, social, and cultural characteristics. A link between pain and self-injurious behavior could not be demonstrated. This behavior may be viewed as an extreme variant of nail biting, with potential ominous complications. Treatment strategies have been employed with mixed results.
描述5例创伤性脊髓损伤患者出现手指自残行为的情况,并对可能的原因和潜在治疗方法进行讨论。
轻微的自我伤害行为,如咬指甲和拔头发,在人类中很常见,通常并无大碍。在某些情况下,这些行为与强迫性人格特质有关。在人类中,自我伤害性咬行为在智力迟钝、精神病患者以及患有莱施-尼汉综合征的患者中已有充分描述。有完整认知能力的人出现自残行为的罕见病例也有报道,最常见于后天性神经系统病变的情况下。脊髓损伤后,有人认为这种行为是动物自切行为的人类变体,是对神经性疼痛的一种反应。
病例报告叙述。
摄影和放射学研究,应用耶鲁-布朗强迫量表(YBOCS)。
在5例完全性四肢瘫痪患者中,仅1例手部疼痛。自残程度从轻微到极端不等。在所有病例中,损伤均局限于无痛觉的身体部位。3例患者的自残行为被发现正在发生。治疗方法包括药物治疗、咨询和行为治疗,效果不一。所有患者都很聪明,愿意讨论自己的问题,并且能够识别生活中的压力和孤立情况。受伤前轻微的强迫行为,如咬指甲,很普遍。在YBOCS量表上,只有1例患者的得分表明有轻度强迫症状。
该组患者表现出不同的医学、社会和文化特征。疼痛与自我伤害行为之间的联系未能得到证实。这种行为可被视为咬指甲的极端变体,可能会引发严重并发症。所采用的治疗策略效果不一。