General Hospital Psychiatry
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 61-66, January 2008

Clinical characteristics and medical complications of pathologic skin picking

Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, MN 55454, USA

Received 25 June 2007; accepted 30 July 2007.

Abstract 

Objective

This study sought to detail the phenomenology and medical consequences of pathologic skin picking (PSP).

Method

Sixty subjects (11.7% males) with PSP (mean±S.D.=33.7±11.6 years) were assessed. Subjects seen in a pharmacological study as well as those from an ongoing outpatient longitudinal study comprised this sample. Subjects were assessed for current and lifetime psychiatric comorbidity (using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders), clinical severity (using the Clinical Global Impression — Severity scale) and psychosocial interference due to picking (using the Sheehan Disability Scale). Clinical characteristic data, including time spent picking per day, sites picked and medical complications directly resulting from skin picking behavior, as well as family history, were also obtained.

Results

The mean age (±S.D.) of onset for PSP was 12.3±9.6 years. The face was the most common area picked. Subjects reported picking a mean of 107.6 min each day. Scarring, ulcerations and infections were common. Few had ever sought psychiatric treatment for their behavior. Current comorbid Axis I psychiatric conditions were found in 38.3% of the sample. Trichotillomania (36.7%), compulsive nail biting (26.7%), depressive disorder (16.7%) and obsessive–compulsive disorder (15%) were the most common current comorbid conditions.

Conclusion

PSP appears to be time consuming and frequently associated with medical complications. Research is needed to optimize patient care for individuals with this behavior.

Keywords: Pathologic skin picking, Neurotic excoriation, Psychogenic excoriation

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PII: S0163-8343(07)00139-9

doi:10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2007.07.009

General Hospital Psychiatry
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 61-66, January 2008