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Dermatillomania is characterised by repetitive skin picking, resulting in tissue damage and significant distress and/or functional impairment. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is the recommended psychological intervention for dermatillomania in clinical guidelines, with the evidence base also supporting habit reversal training (HRT) as part of CBT. However, research evaluating CBT and HRT for dermatillomania remains scarce. This case study describes a young woman with dermatillomania, in the context of co-morbid anxiety and low mood, treated with 20 sessions of CBT including HRT in a community setting. Guided by her formulation, additional techniques such as those fostering self-compassion were also integrated, and sociocultural factors were adapted for. Improvements were reported in client-centred goals and outcomes of global psychological distress, functioning, anxiety and symptoms and psychosocial impacts of skin picking. The intervention was well received by the client. Limitations as well as clinical practice implications and research recommendations for dermatillomania are discussed.
Key learning aims
(1) To understand using CBT, including HRT, to treat a case of dermatillomania in the context of anxiety and depression.
(2) To use a formulation-driven approach to guide the intervention.
(3) To consider adapting interventions for sociocultural factors.
Trichotillomania and skin picking disorder have been characterized as body-focused repetitive behavior (BFRB) disorders (i.e., repetitive self-grooming behaviors that involve biting, pulling, picking, or scraping one’s own hair, skin, lips, cheeks, or nails). Trichotillomania and skin picking disorder have also historically been classified, by some, as types of compulsive self-injury as they involve repetitive hair pulling and skin picking, respectively. The question of the relationship of these disorders to more conventional forms of self-injury such as cutting or self-burning remains incompletely investigated. The objective of this study was to examine the relationship of these two disorders with non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI).
Methods
Adults with trichotillomania (n = 93) and skin picking (n = 105) or both (n = 82) were recruited from the general population using advertisements and online support groups and completed an online survey. Participants completed self-report instruments to characterize clinical profiles and associated characteristics. In addition, each participant completed a mental health history questionnaire.
Results
Of the 280 adults with BFRB disorders, 141 (50.1%) reported a history of self-injury independent of hair pulling and skin picking. Participants with a history of self-injury reported significantly worse pulling and picking symptoms (p < .001) and were significantly more likely to have co-occurring alcohol problems (p < .001), borderline personality disorder (p < .001), buying disorder (p < .001), gambling disorder (p < .001), compulsive sex behavior (p < 001), and binge eating disorder (p = .041).
Conclusions
NSSI appears common in trichotillomania and skin picking disorder and may be part of a larger constellation of behaviors associated with impulse control or reward-related dysfunction.
Prevalence estimates for body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs) such as trichotillomania differ greatly across studies owing to several confounding factors (e.g. different criteria). For the present study, we recruited a diverse online sample to provide estimates for nine subtypes of BFRBs and body-focused repetitive disorders (BFRDs).
Methods
The final sample comprised 1481 individuals from the general population. Several precautions were taken to recruit a diverse sample and to exclude participants with low reliability. We matched participants on gender, race, education and age range to allow unbiased interpretation.
Results
While almost all participants acknowledged at least one BFRB in their lifetime (97.1%), the rate for BFRDs was 24%. Nail biting (11.4%), dermatophagia (8.7%), skin picking (8.2%), and lip-cheek biting (7.9%) were the most frequent BFRDs. Whereas men showed more lifetime BFRBs, the rate of BFRDs was higher in women than in men. Rates of BFRDs were low in older participants, especially after the age of 40. Overall, BFRBs and BFRDs were more prevalent in White than in non-White individuals. Education did not show a strong association with BFRB/BFRDs.
Discussion
BFRBs are ubiquitous. More severe forms, BFRDs, manifest in approximately one out of four people. In view of the often-irreversible somatic sequelae (e.g. scars) BFRBs/BFRDs deserve greater diagnostic and therapeutic attention by clinicians working in both psychology/psychiatry and somatic medicine (especially dermatology and dentistry).
Body-focused repetitive behaviours (BFRBs) such as skin picking and hair pulling are frequent but under-diagnosed and under-treated psychological conditions. As of now, most studies use symptom-specific BFRB scales. However, a transdiagnostic scale is needed in view of the high co-morbidity of different BFRBs.
Aims:
We aimed to assess the reliability as well as concurrent and divergent validity of a newly developed transdiagnostic BFRB scale.
Method:
For the first time, we administered the 8-item Generic BFRB Scale (GBS-8) as well as the Repetitive Body Focused Behavior Scale (RBFBS), modified for adults, in 279 individuals with BFRBs. The GBS-8 builds upon the Skin Picking Scale-Revised (SPS-R), but has been adapted to capture different BFRBs concurrently. A total of 170 participants (61%) were re-assessed after 6 weeks to determine the test–retest reliability of the scale.
Results:
Similar to the SPS-R, factor analysis yielded two dimensions termed symptom severity and impairment. The test–retest reliability of the scale was satisfactory (r = .72, p<.001). Concurrent validity (r = .74) with the RBFBS was good (correlational indexes for concurrent validity were significantly higher than that for discriminant validity).
Discussion:
The GBS-8 appears to be a reliable and valid global measure of BFRBs. We recommend usage of the scale in combination with specific BFRB scales to facilitate comparability across studies on obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders.
Skin or rectal picking, hoarding of nonfood items, and elopement are common behavioral manifestations in PWS. Early recognition and management of excoriation behaviors by redirection and distraction can help reduce picking behavior. If behavioral interventions including habit-reversal training are ineffective, medication management should be considered. N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC), topiramate, guanfacine extended-release, and naltrexone are some of the medicines used to manage picking behaviors. Hoarding of nonfood items is another common behavior in PWS that can lead to significant distress to caregivers. The evidence of medications in the management of hoarding in PWS is limited but behavioral management strategies are discussed. Medications may be considered when attempts to limit hoarding leads to aggressive outbursts. Finally, elopement or runaway behavior can be dangerous and potentially life threatening in PWS. In addition to ensuring security and preventing the act of running away, the underlying causes of the behavior whether psychosocial or psychiatric should be explored and treated appropriately.
This chapter describes the underlying mechanisms and causes of anxiety in people with PWS. Underlying medical conditions such as hypothyroidism may cause anxiety. Response perseveration as a possible explanatory mechanism behind anxiety, obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and poor frustration tolerance is discussed. Co-occurring anxiety disorders are described through case examples. Anxiety can be a sign of an underlying disorder: panic disorder, GAD, etc. COVID-19 pandemic related worsening of anxiety is discussed.Patients with PWS of all ages are especially vulnerable to behavioral outbursts and psychological distress in the face of rapid and drastic changes to routine and lifestyle. Awareness of the wide variety of ways anxiety presents in PWS is needed for its early recognition and appropriate management.
Skin picking disorder and trichotillomania, also characterized as body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs), often lead to functional impairment. Some people with BFRBs, however, report little if any psychosocial dysfunction. There has been limited research as to which clinical aspects of BFRBs are associated with varying degrees of functional impairment.
Methods
Adults (n = 98), ages 18 to 65 with a current diagnosis of trichotillomania (n = 37), skin picking disorder (n = 32), trichotillomania plus skin picking disorder (n = 10), and controls (n = 19) were enrolled. Partial least squares regression (PLS) was used to identify variables associated with impairment on the Sheehan Disability Scale.
Results
PLS identified an optimal model accounting for 45.8% of variation in disability. Disability was significantly related to (in order of descending coefficient size): severity of picking, perceived stress, comorbid disorders (specifically, anxiety disorders / obsessive–compulsive disorder), trait impulsivity, family history of alcohol use disorder, atypical pulling/picking sites, and older age.
Conclusions
At present mental disorders are viewed as unitary entities; however, the extent of impairment varies markedly across patients with BFRBs. These data suggest that whereas symptom nature/severity is important in determining impairment, so too are other variables commonly unmeasured in clinical practice. Outcomes for patients may thus be maximized by rigorously addressing comorbid disorders; as well as integrating components designed to enhance top-down control and stress management. Interestingly, focused picking and emotional pulling were linked to worse disability, hinting at some differences between the two types of BFRBs, in terms of determinants of impairment.
Psychogenic excoriation affects up to 2% of patients in dermatology clinics and leads to marked functional disability, further emotional distress, and medical complications. Patients often develop disfiguring ulcers and scars as a result of uncontrollable skin picking and gouging. Psychogenic excoriation is not explicitly classified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV), but implicitly falls within the category of "impulse control disorders not otherwise specified". From the dermatological point of view, active acne vulgaris lesions, as well as the associated excoriations, ulcers, and scars, should be treated simultaneously. Self-inflicted skin ulcers and scars are often observed in patients with compulsive skin picking. Psychogenic excoriation poses a diagnostic and treatment challenge because patients often also have an undiagnosed underlying psychiatric disorder. Early and ongoing psychotherapeutic intervention will increase the likelihood of more effective management of this complex psychodermatosis.
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