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Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, University College, c/o Grovelands Priory Hospital, The Bourne, Southgate, London N14 6RA
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Abstract |
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Little is known about the outcome of cosmetic surgery in patients with body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). Self-reported outcome was collected on 25 patients with BDD who at the time of psychiatric assessment had reported that they had had cosmetic surgery in the past.
RESULTS
Twenty-five patients with BDD had a total of 46 procedures. The worst outcome was found in those who had had rhinoplasty and those with repeated operations. Mammoplasty and pinnaplasty was associated with higher degrees of satisfaction. Nine patients with BDD, either in desperation at being turned down for cosmetic surgery or because they could not afford it, had performed their own DIY surgery in which they attempted by their own hand to alter their appearance dramatically.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Cosmetic surgery cannot at present be recommended for patients with BDD. However, patients turned down for surgery or who cannot afford it, may try to alter their appearance by themselves. The study contains a selection bias of patients in favour of treatment failures in cosmetic surgery and prospective studies are required on BDD patients who obtain cosmetic surgery or dermatological treatment.
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Introduction |
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The study |
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Patients were also asked if after an operation the preoccupation transferred to another area of the body.
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Findings |
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Three patients claimed that they were not preoccupied by their appearance prior to the surgery and that their symptoms of BDD developed only after surgery, which they believed had been done badly. The satisfaction ratings and any change in preoccupation and overall handicap are listed in Table 1. The numbers of several procedures are small but the satisfaction ratings tended to be higher for mammoplasty, rhytidectomy (face-lift) and pinnaplasty. Mammoplasty and pinnaplasty (but not rhytidectomy) tended to lead to an overall decrease in preoccupation and handicap.
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The satisfaction rating was relatively low for rhinoplasty, which was the most common procedure. The nose is also the most usual location for complaint by patients with BDD (Veale et al, 1996a). Rhinoplasty tended to be associated with an increase in preoccupation and handicap. Most of the patients in the study had multiple concerns about their appearance and reported that after 50% of the procedures the preoccupation transferred tc another area of their body. After one procedure, the mean satisfaction rating was 3.9 (see Table 2). By the second or third procedure, this had dropped to 2.8. The second or third procedure was not always a revision of the first procedure. For example, of the 17 patients who had rhinoplasty, only three underwent one or more revisions and 14 had a different procedure when their preoccupation moved to a different area of the body. When patients were dissatisfied with their operation, they often felt guilty or angry with themselves or the surgeon for having made their appearance worse, thus further fuelling their depression and a failure to achieve their ideal. This in turn tended to increase mirror gazing and craving for more surgery. Six patients rated themselves as satisfied with their procedure (defined as a rating of 7-10). Four of these patients went on to have one or more further procedures or were dissatisfied with another area of their body but did not have further surgery.
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DIY cosmetic surgery
Nine patients with BDD (of whom two were included in the sample above)
reported performing their own cosmetic surgery in which they attempted to
alter their appearance dramatically. This was either in desperation at being
turned down for cosmetic surgery or because they could not afford it. The
procedures were often associated with many hours of mirror gazing and intense
disgust at their perceived defect. Examples of the procedures that were
undertaken are shown in the Appendix. All cases were dissatisfied with the
results of their own attempts at surgery.
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Comment |
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Even when patients were partially or wholly satisfied with the results then the preoccupation transferred to a different area of the body and they remained significantly handicapped in their symptoms of BDD. There is a suggestion that the onset of BDD for some patients occurred after cosmetic surgery although this needs confirmation in a larger prospective study of patients before cosmetic surgery.
The main weaknesses of this study and that of Phillips et al (1993) are:
There is, however, never likely to be a randomised-controlled trial of cosmetic surgery in patients with BDD comparing, for example, cognitive-behavioural therapy (Veale et al, 1996b) or a serotonin reuptake inhibitor (Hollander et al, 1999). At best, a prospective study of patients with BDD undergoing specific cosmetic surgery operations with a long-term follow-up is required to determine efficacy in the long term and whether patients eventually become satisfied after several operations.
The motivation for DIY surgery is complex, but it appears primarily either to camouflage a perceived defect or to try to achieve an unrealistic ideal. It does not fit the existing classification of self-harm by Favazza & Rosenthal (1993). It has a similar poor psychological outcome in so far as nearly all the patients were dissatisfied with their handiwork and found their symptoms of BDD were exacerbated. It reflects the extreme measures that some patients take and is mirrored in the high rate of attempted suicide in this population (Veale et al, 1996a).
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Appendix |
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A woman preoccupied by her skin and the shape of her face. She filed down her teeth in order to alter the appearance of her jaw-line.
A man who was preoccupied with the appearance of his chin deliberately cycled into the back of a lorry in an attempt to fracture his jaw so that it could be reset in a way that he wanted. At the last moment, he decided against the plan, dropped his head, cut his forehead and fractured his skull.
A man preoccupied by his facial skin said he had used sandpaper as a form of dermabrasion to remove scars and to lighten his skin.
A man who was preoccupied by redness on his skin repeatedly exsanguinated himself by a syringe and needle or when he was accepted, by going to blood transfusion clinics to make himself look paler.
A woman who was preoccupied by the ugliness of multiple areas of her body who desired liposuction but could not afford it, used a knife to cut her thighs and attempted to squeeze out the fat.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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CARR, A. T., HARRIS, D. L. & JAMES, C. (2000) The Derriford Appearance Scale (DAS59): a new rated self-report questionnaire. British Journal of Health Psychology, in press.
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SARWER, D. B., WADDEN, T. A., PERTSCHUK, M. J., et al (1998) Body image dissatisfaction and body dysmorphic disorder in 100 cosmetic surgery patients. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, 101, 1644-1649.[Medline]
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VEALE, D., GOURNAY, K., DRYDEN, W., et al (1996b) Body Dysmorphic Disorder: a cognitive behavioural model and pilot randomised-controlled trial. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 34, 717-729.[CrossRef][Medline]
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