Thursday, April 06, 2006

B.I.I. D. (Body Integrity Identity Disorder)



Do you know that there are people who are obsessed to amputate their legs?

NOTE: Husband and I just finished watching the tv tonite...11.34 PM Thursday. Husband recorded this show. Anyhow, after watching "The American Inventor" what showed in our picture tube was the "MEDICAL MYSTERY" show on PRIME TIME. Tonight, we both learned of this: B.I.I.D. or Body Integrity Indentity Disorder . If you are not familiar with this as we were, read this information below.


What is "Body Integrity Identity Disorder"?
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Body Integrity Identity Disorder (BIID), also known as Amputee Identity Disorder or Apotemnophilia (from Greek word which means "to cut off" and "love of") is the overwhelming desire to
amputate one or more healthy limbs or other parts of the body. Although it most commonly refers to people who wish to amputate limbs, BIID also applies to those who wish to alter their bodily integrity. The more recent names have generally replaced the name "apotemnophilia" because the identification of this disorder simply as a paraphilia is now increasingly believed to be incorrect.

A person with BIID typically wants one or more of his or her limbs cut off. The condition should not be mistaken for a person with
acrotomophilia, who is sexually attracted to other persons who are already missing limbs. However, there does seem to be some relationship between the two disorders, with some individuals exhibiting both conditions.

Today, very few
surgeons will treat BIID patients by giving them what they want. Some act out their desires, pretending they are amputees using prostheses and other tools to ease their desire to be one. There are hence several recorded cases of sufferers resorting to self-amputation of a "superfluous" limb, for example by allowing a train to run over it, or by damaging the limb so badly that surgeons will have to amputate it. Often the obsession is with one specific limb, with patients "not feeling complete while they still have a left leg", for example. However, BIID does not simply involve amputation. It involves any wish to significantly alter body integrity. Some people suffer from the desire to become paralyzed, blind, deaf, etc. The condition is usually treated, unsuccessfully, as a psychiatric disorder.

Persons suffering from BIID can be as young as four or five years old when they first discover their condition, for example by feeling jealous of an amputee. Some BIID patients compare the evaluation of BIID as a psychiatric illness to the historical classification of homosexuality as a mental illness. Like gays and transgender people, someone suffering from BIID feels that he or she is "meant" to live with an altered body. They consider this to be an unconscious genetic decision, much like sexual orientation. The same argument -- no one would choose to have something this difficult -- is applied. Some BIID-rights advocates suggest that as little as 30 years ago, being transgender, gay, bisexual or anything relating to that was considered just as "wrong" as BIID is today, and that this should change in the future.


2 comments:

  1. I just found your blog when I was looking for BIID information. I am a BIID sufferer, I´m from Europe, male, early thirties. Suffering from BIID is just like hell sometimes, living in the "wrong body" can noone understand. To me it is amazing how well known this phenomenon now becomes. It´s amazing how many people slowly recognize our sufferin. I can only hope we will not have to wait 30 years until surgeons will be willing to offer surgical treatment. I hope we will not have to wait as long as transsexuals had to wait, because waiting means suffering.

    Regards
    M. from Germany

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you for writing. I watched the documentary of HBO and I was surprised to know this syndrome. I hope you get to overcome this crisis. I think it would be helpful if you go for therapy. Goodluck!

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