More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Self-embedding of objects in body a puzzling teen disorder
CBC News
Wednesday, December 3, 2008

'It's cutting gone to the next level,' says doctor

Some teens are wounding themselves and embedding objects such as paper clips and glass to cope with disturbed thoughts and feelings, say U.S. doctors who are looking for ways to remove the objects safely.

Self-embedding moves beyond self-injury, such as cutting the skin, burning, bruising or pulling hair, breaking bones or swallowing toxic substances.

The prevalence is unknown because many cases go unreported, but recent studies reported that 13 to 24 per cent of high school students in the U.S. and Canada have deliberately injured themselves at least once, according to research presented at the Radiological Society of North America's annual meeting in Chicago on Wednesday.

"We identified a group of 10 patients over a three-year period of time that have this pattern of self-inflicted injury," said Dr. William Shiels, chief of radiology at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, who presented his findings on developing a minimally invasive surgical technique to remove the objects at the meeting.

"It's cutting gone to the next level."

Before 2005, Shiels said, he had never seen a case. Shiels and his colleagues studied 19 episodes of self-embedding injury in nine young women and one male, all aged 15 to 18.

Teens inserted the objects into their arms, hands, feet, ankles and necks, the researchers said.

Most had significant psychiatric problems including depression. The teens reported they were in an agitated state and that the embedding brought a degree of comfort, Shiels said.

Researchers have speculated that self-injury may release natural opiates in the brain.

Pediatric radiologists used ultrasound and fluoroscopic imaging to guide their removal of 52 embedded objects ? including needles, staples, paper clips, wood, plastic, crayon and stone ? that could not normally be detected in X-rays.

The technique offers surgeons and emergency physicians a safe and effective way to remove objects that could break apart using traditional surgical techniques, said co-author Adam Young.

The act of cutting itself may not be a suicide attempt, but 90 per cent of the patients are suicidal, said Wendy Lader, a psychologist and co-founder of S.A.F.E. Alternatives, a treatment program for self-injury disorders in Naperville, Ill.

"They are trying desperately to find ways to cope with life's problems, and suicide is definitely an option," Lader said.
 

NicNak

Resident Canuck
Administrator
TRIGGER

I remember when I was cutting, I felt so overwhelmed before hand. I couldn't get the idea out of my head. The more I tried to fight it the stronger the urge got.

I remember one of the few times I called my Psychiatrist was when I was at work fighting the urge and my mind was a mess. I knew I had to take something for it, but wasn't sure if I should take Clonasipam or a bit of Risperidal, but was too afraid to take the Risperidal as I was at work and still had to somehow get home by driving. He had said mine were impulsive urges.

When I was cutting I felt like I was almost in a trance state. Like I was outside of myself, it was like cutting brought me back or something. I never felt pain when I cut. These experiences were probably the most scary I had had in the years of coping with mental illness.

I always cut at work {detail deleted}. I never cut at home as I didn't want to contaminate anything {detail deleted}.

I remember after these "episodes" I could sleep for days, it was exhausting trying to fight the urge and for some reason even if I didn't fight and just cut, I was tired too.
 
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