University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
BMJ Ment Health. 2023 Sep;26(1). doi: 10.1136/bmjment-2023-300795.
Trichotillomania, or hair-pulling disorder, is one of a family of disorders called body-focused repetitive behaviours (BFRBs), which also include disordered skin-picking (dermotillomania) and nail-biting (onychophagia). The disorders affect 1%-2% of the population, cause high levels of distress and have high levels of comorbidity with other psychiatric diagnoses. The key facts and figures are briefly reviewed and some important points are further explored: (1) BFRBs are associated with psychological distress, but are distinct from other diagnoses, (2) The pathological behaviours mirror excessive self-grooming behaviours in other species, and may relate to immune-system mediated feedback loops, and (3) The resulting behaviours are stigmatised and cause intense shame and isolation for those who suffer, which might in itself maintain the feedback loop. These observations lead to the hypothesis that the core disorder is one of pathological grooming, which may have a basis in an immune response, with shame being both a consequence and a maintainer of the disorder. The major barrier to testing the hypotheses and potential interventions remains the stigma that keeps these disorders, and those who suffer from them, in the shadows.
拔毛癖,或毛发拔拽障碍,是一类被称为躯体关注性重复行为障碍(BFRBs)的疾病之一,还包括不适当的皮肤搔抓(皮肤搔抓障碍)和咬指甲(咬甲癖)。这些疾病影响了人群中的 1%-2%,引起了很高程度的痛苦,并与其他精神诊断存在很高的共病率。简要回顾了关键事实和数据,并进一步探讨了一些要点:(1)BFRBs 与心理困扰有关,但与其他诊断不同;(2)病理性行为反映了其他物种过度的自我修饰行为,可能与免疫系统介导的反馈回路有关;(3)由此产生的行为被污名化,给那些受其困扰的人带来强烈的羞耻和孤立感,这本身可能会维持反馈回路。这些观察结果导致了一个假设,即核心障碍是一种病理性修饰,其可能基于免疫反应,而羞耻既是该障碍的结果,也是其维持者。测试假设和潜在干预措施的主要障碍仍然是污名化,这种污名化使这些障碍及其患者处于阴影之中。