Industrial Psychiatry Journal (Jan 2016)

Two cases of male genital self-mutilation

  • Vinay Singh Chauhan,
  • Prateek Yadav,
  • Sunil Goyal,
  • Sahabaz Ali Khan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0972-6748.207854
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 228 – 231

Abstract

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Male genital self-mutilation (GSM) is a rare but serious phenomenon. Some of the risk factors for this act are the presence of religious delusions, command hallucinations, low self-esteem, and feelings of guilt associated with sexual offences. Other risk factors include failures in the male role, problems in the early developmental period, such as experiencing difficulties in male identification and persistence of incestuous desires, depression, and having a history of GSM. The eponym Klingsor Syndrome, which involves the presence of religious delusions, is proposed for GSM. Psychiatric case reports of male GSM in the literature are rare and mostly anecdotal.

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