Home > Journals > Minerva Pediatrics > Past Issues > Minerva Pediatrica 2008 June;60(3) > Minerva Pediatrica 2008 June;60(3):355-9

CURRENT ISSUE
 

JOURNAL TOOLS

Publishing options
eTOC
To subscribe
Submit an article
Recommend to your librarian
 

ARTICLE TOOLS

Reprints
Permissions
Share

 

CASE REPORTS   

Minerva Pediatrica 2008 June;60(3):355-9

Copyright © 2008 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

language: Italian

Self-inflicted dermatitis: a case in pediatric age

Andreoli E., Finore E. D., Provini A., Paradisi M.

Istituto Dermopatico dell’Immacolata IDI IRCCS Roma, Roma


PDF


The skin is an organ that has a primary function in the tactile receptivity and also reacts significantly to emotional stimuli. The high visibility of the dermatological diseases makes the skin a privileged target for feelings and actions that reflect behavioural problems. The tendency to self-harm can be expressed with remarkable frequency through dermatological lesions; among them neurotic excoriations are a clinical frame in which patients, unlike for other “similar” pathologies, succeed however in recognizing their own role in the development of the cutaneous lesions. This pathology is not frequent in paediatric age; the highest statistical frequency, however, is to be found in the adolescence period of development. The authors describe a multidisciplinary, dermatological and psychological intervention on a child who intensifies a pre-existing dermatological symptom for psychological reasons.

top of page