Unusual Medical Cases and Stories

Strange, Weird & Bizarre Medical Cases & Facts



10 Realities of Trichotillomania 9

Posted on April 14, 2012 by Dana Bashor

Trichotillomania or obsessive hair pulling, is a disorder that affects many people all over the world. This serious mental disease can start in children as young as 12 months old! Let’s look at some startling realities of the condition, and what these compulsive hair pullers have to go through on a daily basis. Keep an eye out – if someone you know if suffering from Trichotillomania, this list will help you to understand exactly how extreme the condition can be.

1) A Few Here, and a Few More Over…Here

Did you know that excessive plucking of your eyebrows is a form of Trichotillomania? Many people who suffer from this condition state that their condition began with a few simple eyebrow hairs. This spiraled out of control, and soon it led to eyelashes being pulled, head hair removal and pubic hair pulling.

Because tweezing and general hair upkeep is such an ingrained part of our daily lives, many people who experience the warning signs of this condition, don’t realize it until they are hooked. Once the habit forms, it is extremely difficult to break. That’s why it’s so important to stop before it becomes a huge part of your life.

2) Not Just a Phase

Because Trichotillomania tends to start in most people when they are in their adolescence, the symptoms and clear warning signs are often overlooked by the people around them. Children are prone to all sorts of behaviors as they grow up, but that doesn’t mean this condition should be treated as a nail biting phase that will go away.

Like most forms of mental disorder, Trichotillomania gets worse over time, resulting in a prematurely bald child with severe emotional problems. These problems stem from the humiliation of hair loss so young.

Trichotillomania

3) Controlling Your Impulses

Make no mistake Trichotillomania is an extreme compulsion disorder, peppered with a form of masochism that manifests from the person’s own unnatural behavior. Though people are aware that they have this mental disorder they can’t stop, and it becomes as damaging and dangerous as cutting.

There is little help for these people, as the condition is so rare that it hasn’t been studied as much as other mental disorders. With only 200 000 people in the US affected, they often suffer in silence, or spend years in isolation ashamed of their condition.

4) Escalating Into Trichotillophagia

While Trichotillomania is obsessive hair pulling, Trichotillophagia is obsessive hair eating, which develops from the original condition. A person suffering from this condition may start out with both pulling and eating, though usually the pulling escalates into eating over time.

When people eat their hair compulsively it can cause massive health problems. The most extreme is when a large mass of hair forms in the stomach that clumps and forces weight loss, abdominal pain and eventually – emergency room admission. The clump is known as a trichobezoar and it needs to be removed immediately in open surgery or the patient will eventually die.

5) A Female Problem?

In a recent case study, an overwhelming proportion of Trichotillomania sufferers were found to be female. No one really knows why, but the logical reason would be that girls tend to internalize their feelings more than boys, and are therefore more prone to seeking emotional comfort – no matter how damaging it may be.

6) The Secret Gene

As science advances and more people come forward with this disorder, naturally progress with happen. Recently scientists have discovered a gene that is said to be responsible for Trichotillomania. Like the ‘addiction gene’ this specific mutation can be manipulated – though we are years away from that kind of cure. In the meantime, these scientists are studying people who are affected by the disorder, studying their genes and coming up with biological solutions to the problem.

eyelash

7) OCD or Not OCD?

There has been much debate over Trichotillomania, and the world wants to know whether it’s a form of OCD or not. Seeing as this is a ‘realities’ article here is the truth about the situation. Trichotillomania is an impulsive disorder. OCD is obsessive compulsive disorder.

What’s the difference? Not much. The two could even be said to be interchangeable. The same supportive treatment applies, as does the general diagnoses. If you’re a hair puller, you have a form of OCD – it’s not OCD, but its close enough.

8) A Cure For Pullers?

Trichotillomania is pretty rare, but because of the severe effects on the people who do suffer from the condition – there are treatments that you could try. Cognitive behavioral therapy is an option, as it hypnosis and certain types of medication. These medications work best to calm the patient and suppress irrational urges to pull their own hair out. The most successful treatment for this condition is still constant therapy combined with long term medication. Like most mental disorders it will be a long road to recovery.

9) Damaging Effects

Hair pulling and eating will result in noticeable bald spots, receding hairlines and skin problems, if the disorder is acute. This in turn leads to social exclusion – as the person affected becomes more and more ashamed of what they look like. Wigs help, but they don’t disguise the fact that their eyebrows and other body hair is damaged or gone. This extreme isolation, guilt and shame sometimes end in tragedy and suicide.

10) A Life Long Struggle

The harshest reality of all is that people with Trichotillomania rarely recover. Instead they choose to live with the disorder, doing their best to look normal to the outside world when they go out. Until there is a definitive cure, hair pullers will always struggle to stop this damaging habit. All they can do is work towards it, go to therapy and take calming medication for as long as possible.

About Dana Bashor

On her free time Dana Bashor loves to freelance on different topics and provide consumer alerts for sites like planet antares scam alerts.  Catch up with Dana on her blog Dana Bashor blog where you will find whats going on in her life.

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Superhumans Explained – The Human Anvil 0

Posted on April 03, 2012 by Bizarre Medical News

So, like I’ve said before, I’m totally obsessed with this show on The History Channel called Stan Lee’s Superhumans.  On the very first episode, they featured this guy named Gino Martino (actually his name is John Ferraro) who can break stuff over his head.  And not just boards and stuff like that.  Try steel beams.  Check this out:

How, oh how, is this possible?  The beams aren’t fake, that’s one thing.  And this guy’s amazing head-butt powers are further examined on the History Channel show.  He breaks a cinderblock by placing the cinderblock on his head and having someone drop a BOWLING BALL on it. He breaks another cinderblock by having someone hit it with a sledgehammer.  Most of these activities would kill someone, or at least seriously scramble their brains, but Gino/John is able to do this with little side effects.  No, it’s not super easy for him, but he can shake it off pretty quickly.

cinderblock

SPOILER ALERT!

So, after doing the tests and things on this guy, the show’s scientists or doctors or whatever discovered that this guy’s skull is, like, 14.5 mm thick.  The average man’s skull is about 6.5 mm thick, which means that Dudester here has a skull that is over twice as thick as an average skull.  How completely cool is that?

Unfortunately for Gino/John, his SKIN isn’t super thick, so when he does things like breaking metal over his head, or hammering a big nail into a board with his forehead, he still gets a little bloody.

Gino 1
But despite his tendency to get all gory, John Ferraro is actually sort of a superhuman.  He has a super thick skull, which makes this self-proclaimed “Head Butt King” exceptional.  Stan Lee named him “The Human Anvil,” and we’re all sort of hoping he gets his own book, right?

thehumananvil

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Blaschko’s Lines – A Skin Disease 0

Posted on March 22, 2012 by Bizarre Medical News

In the world of crazy skin ailments, Blaschko’s Lines are certainly interesting.  Discovered by Alfred Blaschko in 1901, this condition is manifested by a V-shaped pattern of lesions over the back, with S-shaped swirls all over the front side of the trunk.  People can have the tendency toward this condition without it ever manifesting, until something like a pigment disorder or another problem manifests and BAM!  Stripey skin.

Blaschkolines

Funny enough, the condition is common in people who have Chimera.   The lines reportedly follow the “migration of embyronic cells” and can also be found in animals.

To reiterate, the disease is invisible, until the sufferer develops a skin condition that causes the patterns to manifest.  Some of the skin conditions that can make the disease manifest are focal dermal hyperplasia, CHILD syndrome, MIDAS syndrome, sebaceous naevus, McCune-Albright syndrome, Lichen striatus, linear morphoea, and a bunch of other skin disorders you may have never heard of.

blaschkos_lines

Blaschko’s Lines are often talked about in relation to mosaicism, which is a condition similar to and related to chimerism.  In mosaicism, the person or animal has two distinct genetic populations of skin cells that live side by side with one another.  Blaschko’s Lines are the Type 1a and 1b forms of cutaneous mosaicism.  Not all sufferers of cutaneous mosaicism  have Blaschko’s Lines, and not all people who have Blaschko’s lines also have cutaneous mosaicism.

The general thought is that all skin has these stripes, but the conditions we talk about above are the ones who bring the stripes to light.

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