PARAPHILIA

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'Paraphilia' (in Greek ''para'' παρά = besides and ''-philia'' φιλία = love)—in psychology and sexology, is a term that describes a family of persistent, intense fantasies, aberrant urges, or behaviors involving sexual arousal to nonhuman objects, pain or humiliation experienced by oneself or one's partner, children or other nonconsenting individuals or unsuitable partners. ''Paraphilias'' may interfere with the capacity for reciprocal affectionate sexual activity. [1] ''Paraphilia'' is also used to imply non-mainstream sexual practices without necessarily implying dysfunction or deviance (see Clinical warnings section). Also, it may describe sexual feelings toward otherwise non-sexual objects.
=Clinical views of paraphilias=
There is much debate about what (if anything) should constitute a paraphiliac, and how these should be clinically classified ''(see Controversy, below)''.

Contents
Clinically recognized paraphilias
Intensity and specificity
Psychology of paraphilias
Behavioral imprinting
Non-clinical views on paraphilias
Religious views
Legal views
Paraphilia in popular culture
Controversy over the term
Drug treatment of paraphilias
Hormone drug treatments
Psychoactive drug treatments
List of paraphilias
See also
External links
Notes
Clinically recognized paraphilias

Clinical literature discusses eight major paraphilias individually.[2] According to the ''Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders'', the activity must be the sole means of sexual gratification for a period of six (6) months, and either cause "clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning" or involve a violation of consent to be diagnosed as a paraphilia.[3]

Exhibitionism: the recurrent urge or behavior to expose one's genitals to an unsuspecting person.

Fetishism: the use of non-sexual or nonliving objects or part of a person's body to gain sexual excitement. ''Partialism'' refers to fetishes specifically involving nonsexual parts of the body.

Frotteurism: the recurrent urges or behavior of touching or rubbing against a nonconsenting person.

Pedophilia: the sexual attraction to prepubescent or peripubescent children.

Sexual Masochism: the recurrent urge or behavior of wanting to be humiliated, beaten, bound, or otherwise made to suffer for sexual pleasure.

Sexual Sadism: the recurrent urge or behavior involving acts in which the pain or humiliation of the victim is sexually exciting.

Transvestic fetishism: a sexual attraction towards the clothing of the opposite gender.

Voyeurism: the recurrent urge or behavior to observe an unsuspecting person who is naked, disrobing or engaging in sexual activities, or may not be sexual in nature at all.

Vincilagnia: Being sexually aroused by bondage

★ Other rarer paraphilias are grouped together under ''Other paraphilias not otherwise specified'' (ICD-9-CM equivalent of "Sexual Disorder NOS") and include telephone scatalogia (obscene phone calls), necrophilia (corpses), partialism (exclusive focus on one part of the body), zoophilia (animals), coprophilia (feces), klismaphilia (enemas), urophilia (urine), emetophilia (vomit).
Homosexuality was previously listed as a paraphilia in the DSM-I and DSM-II. Consistent with the change in consensus among psychiatrists it was not included in later editions. A disorder of clinical distress caused by the ''repression'' of homosexuality is still listed. Literature also documents many other paraphilias, both common and rare.
Intensity and specificity

Clinicians distinguish between optional, preferred and exclusive paraphilias, though the terminology is not completely standardized. An "optional" paraphilia is an alternative route to sexual arousal. For example, a man with otherwise unremarkable sexual interests might sometimes seek or enhance sexual arousal by wearing women's underwear. In preferred paraphilias, a person prefers the paraphilia to conventional sexual activities, but also engages in conventional sexual activities. For example, a man might prefer to wear women's underwear during sexual activity, whenever possible. In exclusive paraphilias, a person is unable to become sexually aroused in the absence of the paraphilia.
Optional paraphilias are far more common than preferred paraphilias, which are, in turn, far more common than exclusive paraphilias.
Optional paraphilias sometimes disrupt stable relationships when discovered by an unsuspecting partner. Preferred paraphilias often disrupt otherwise stable relationships. Open communication and mutual support can minimize or prevent such disruption in both of these cases. Exclusive paraphilias often preclude normal courtship and committed romantic relationships, even when the person in question desires such a relationship. Loneliness or social isolation are common consequences. In extreme cases, preoccupation with a preferred or exclusive paraphilia completely displaces the more typical desire for loving human relationships.
Psychology of paraphilias

Behavioral imprinting

Observation of paraphiliac behavior has provided valuable scientific information on the mechanisms of sexual attraction and desire, such as behavioral imprinting. Careful investigation has also led to the tentative conclusions that normal biological processes may sometimes be manifested in idiosyncratic ways in at least some of the paraphilias, and that these unusual manifestations are frequently associated with unusual (and especially traumatic) events associated with early sexual experience. They tend to be caused by classical conditioning in that a sexual stimulus has been paired with stimuli and situations that do not typically result in sexual response and has then been perpetuated through operant conditioning because the sexual response is its own reward or positive reinforcement.

Non-clinical views on paraphilias


Religious views

Main articles: Religion and sexuality

Some religious adherents view various paraphilias as deviations from their conception of their religion's deities' plan for human sexuality, or from their religious laws. Depending in part on the nature of the paraphilia in question, judgements can differ as to whether religiously it should be considered a case of sexual sin, mental illness, or simply harmless sexual variation. Another variable is whether it is the acting out, or (less commonly) just the desirous thought alone, which is critically viewed in such cases. In any event, several paraphilias, as with many other behavior patterns outside the mainstream, are viewed negatively by various religions.
Some religious traditions include forms of extreme asceticism, such as whipping , which, when practiced as sexual activities, would usually be considered masochism and popularly viewed as paraphilias. When practiced for non-sexual reasons, they are usually valued by the religious groups concerned as a part of their religious observance and submission to God.
Legal views

Main articles: Sex and the law

As a general rule, the law in many countries often intervenes in paraphilias involving young or adolescent children below the legal age of consent, nonconsensual deliberate displays or illicit watching of sexual activity, consensual sex with animals, illegal manipulation of dead people, harassment, nuisance, fear, injury, or assault of a sexual nature. Separately, it also usually regulates or controls censorship of pornographic material.
''Exhibitionism'', in cases where people who have not previously agreed to watch are exposed to sexual display, is also an offense in most jurisdictions, as is voyeurism when unarranged. ''(See indecent exposure and peeping tom)''
''Non-consensual'' sadomasochistic acts may legally constitute assault and therefore belong in the list below. Some jurisdictions criminalize some or all sadomasochistic acts, regardless of legal consent, and impose liability for any injuries caused. For these purposes, non-physical injuries are included in the definition of grievous bodily harm in English law. ''(See Consent (BDSM)), Operation Spanner'')
The paraphilias listed below may carry a condition of illegality in some areas if acted out (though they may usually be legally role-played between consenting partners).

Biastophilia: sexual pleasure from committing rape

Exhibitionism and voyeurism, if lacking mutual agreement.

Frotteurism: sexual arousal through rubbing one's self against an unknowing stranger in public

Erotophonophilia/Lust murderism: sexual arousal through committing murder

Necrophilia: sexual attraction to corpses

Necrozoophilia: sexual attraction to the corpses or killings of animals (also known as necrobestiality)

Pedophilia: sexual attraction to peripubescent or pre-pubescent minors

Renfield's syndrome: clinical vampirism, or a compulsion to drink blood as a sexually-arousing act

Telephone scatologia: being sexually aroused by making obscene telephone calls

Zoophilia: emotional or sexual attraction to animals

Zoosadism: the sexual enjoyment of causing pain and suffering to animals.
Paraphilia in popular culture

In the late twentieth and early twenty-first century, previously censored or stigmatized images of many paraphilias became more prevalent in the popular culture of Western countries.

★ Sadomasochism: In the independent 1974 Italian film ''The Night Porter'', Charlotte Rampling wore a hat from a Nazi uniform in a sadomasochistic sex scene. At the time, the image was startling and new, but over the following years the use of Nazi-tinged iconography in a sexual context became mainstream, appearing first in mass-marketed pornography like Playboy and Penthouse, and finally becoming so tame that teen queen Britney Spears wore a similar outfit to a primetime awards show in 2003.

★ By 2006, sadomasochistic imagery had become mainstream enough for singer Justin Timberlake to have a hit song, SexyBack, with the lyric "You see these shackles baby, I'm your slave! / I'll let you whip me if I misbehave!"

★ Zoophilia: Sex with animals has been a theme in a number of popular comedies, including Bachelor Party, Clerks II, and The 40-Year-Old Virgin. All these movies present the paraphilia as funny rather than erotic, as something ordinary young men are curious about but in the end find disgusting; in a minority of films and documentaries, the subject is given serious or thoughtful treatment. In all three movies the animal involved is an equine. In an episode of The Simpsons, Troy McClure acknowledges being sexually attracted to fish; his career had been damaged following an unspecified incident at an aquarium.

★ The flash cartoon series Salad Fingers has strong themes of Galactophilia & Algolagnia.

★ The avantgarde film Spiklenci slasti revolves around fetishes & paraphilia.
Controversy over the term

The definition of various sexual practices as paraphilias has been met with opposition. Advocates for changing these definitions stress that, aside from "paraphilias" with a criminal element, there is nothing inherently pathological about these practices; they are undeserving of the stigmatism associated with being "singled out" as such. Those who profess such a view hope that, much as with the removal of homosexuality from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (''see'' homosexuality and psychology), future psychiatric definitions will not include most of these practices.

Drug treatment of paraphilias


The treatment of men with paraphilias and related disorders has been challenging for patients and clinicians. In the past, surgical castration was advocated as a therapy for men with paraphilias, but it was abandoned because it is considered a cruel punishment and is now illegal in most countries. Psychotherapy, self-help groups, and pharmacotherapy (including the controversial hormone therapy sometimes referred to as "chemical castration") have all been used but are often unsuccessful. Here are some current drug treatments for these disorders.
Hormone drug treatments

In humans, testosterone has a crucial role not only in the development and maintenance of male sexual characteristics but also in the control of sexuality, aggression, cognition, emotion, and personality. Testosterone is a major determinant of sexual desire, fantasies, and behavior, and it increases the frequency, duration, and magnitude of spontaneous and nocturnal erections. The deviant sexual fantasies, urges, and behavior of men with paraphilias also appear to be triggered by testosterone. Therefore, reducing testosterone secretion or inhibiting its action is believed to control these symptoms.
Antiandrogenic drugs such as medroxyprogesterone (also known as the long-acting contraceptive Depo Provera) have been widely used as therapy in these men to reduce sex drive. However, their efficacy is limited and they have many unpleasant side effects, including breast growth, headaches, weight gain, and reduction in bone density. Even if compliance is good, only 60 to 80 percent of men benefit from this type of drug. Long-acting gonadotropin-releasing hormones, such as Triptorelin (Trelstar) which reduces the release of gonadotropin hormones, are also used. This drug is a synthetic hormone which may also lead to reduced sex drive.
Psychoactive drug treatments

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) class of antidepressants such as fluoxetine (Prozac), sertraline (Zoloft), fluvoxamine (Luvox), and paroxitine (Paxil), have all been used to treat paraphilias and related disorders by reducing impulse control problems and/or sexual obsessions with some success. SSRIs work by selectively inhibiting presynaptic serotonin reuptake with minimal effect on levels of norepinephrine or dopamine.
Tricyclic antidepressants (TCA), such as imipramine (Tofranil) and desipramine (Norpramin), inhibit the reuptake of serotonin and noradrenaline, and can also modify the activity of glutamatergic neurons. This effect is caused by blocking the reuptake pumps in monoamine nerve synapses, extending the length of time neurotransmitters remain in the synapse and increasing their concentration. OCD responds preferentially to the TCA clomipramine (Anafranil), which is relatively selective for serotonin reuptake. Concern about these medications, however, persist as a result of their extensive side-effects, drug interactions, and toxicity when taken in excess.
Lithium, the mood-stabilizing drug also known as Eskalith is typically used for the treatment of mania in bipolar disorder. There are some reports of reduced sexual compulsive behavior and a reduction in obsessive sexual thoughts in patients, which they attribute to the drug's enhancement of serotonergic functioning.
Anxiolytics are not considered a typical treatment for these type of disorders, however the efficacy of buspirone (BuSpar) has been clinically demonstrated.
Psychostimulants have been used recently to augment the effects of serotonergic drugs in paraphiliacs. In theory, the prescription of a psychostimulant without pretreatment with an SSRI might further disinhibit sexual behavior, but when taken together, the psychostimulant may actually reduce impulsive tendencies. Methylphenidate (Ritalin) is a type of amphetamine used primarily to manage the symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Recent studies imply that methylphenidate may also act on serotonergic systems; this may be important in explaining the paradoxical calming effect of stimulants on ADHD patients. Amphetamine is also used medically as an adjunct to antidepressants in refractory cases of depression.
(Source: BrainPhysics About Sexual Compulsions)

List of paraphilias


:''Also see article -philia for "-philias" in other fields''
Used in a sexual context, terms with the ''-philia'' suffix refer to conditions in which the person's primary sexual interest involves the stimulus or situation mentioned (the suffix is also used for non-sexual interest in or admiration of a subject). Terms with the ''-lagnia'' suffix refer to an action involving the stimulus or situation. For example, someone who is consistently sexually excited by feces would have coprophilia; any sexual act involving feces, even by someone for whom that is not a primary interest, would be coprolagnia.
The following terms mostly represent combinations of Greek or Latin words or roots, but few qualify as clinical paraphilias. Some of the following sexual interests are fairly common, while others are very rare.

Abasiophilia: love of (or sexual attraction to) people who are lame or crippled and/or who use leg braces or other orthopaedic appliances

Acarophilia: sexual pleasure from being tickled or itching

Acomophilia: sexual attraction to baldness (also hairless genitalia)

Acousticophilia: sexual arousal from certain sounds

Acrotomophilia: love of (or sexual attraction to) amputation or amputees

Adolescentilism: sexual pleasure from acting or dressing like an adolescent

Ailurophilia: a form of zoophilia—sexual attraction to cats

Agalmatophilia: sexual attraction to statues or mannequins or immobility

Algolagnia: sexual pleasure from pain

Amaurophilia: sexual arousal by a partner whom one is unable to see due to artificial means, such as being blindfolded or having sex in total darkness. ''(See: sensory deprivation)''

Andromimetophilia: love of women dressed as men or have had a sex change; see also gynemimetophilia

Apodysophilia: desire to undress, see also nudism

Apotemnophilia: desire to have (or sexual arousal from having) a healthy appendage (limb, digit, or male genitals) amputated

Aquaphilia: arousal from water and/or in watery environments, including bathtubs or swimming pools

Aretifism: sexual attraction to people who are without footwear, in contrast to retifism

Asphyxiophilia: sexual attraction to asphyxia; also called breath control play (or being strangled); including autoerotic asphyxiation; see medical warnings

Autoabasiophilia: sexual attraction to oneself being lame or crippled

Autagonistophilia: sexual arousal from being observed or creating conditions for facilitating observation; see also exhibitionism

Autogynephilia: love of oneself as a woman (also see Blanchard, Bailey, and Lawrence theory for discussion on controversy)

Autonephioplia: (a.k.a diaper fetishism) sexual arousal from diapers

Autossassinophilia: sexual arousal from fantasizing about or staging one's own murder

Biastophilia: sexual pleasure from committing rape or being raped; see also raptophilia

Celebriphilia: pathological desire to have sex with a celebrity

Chrematistophilia: sexual arousal from paying for sex or being robbed by one’s sexual partner; see also harpaxophilia

Coprophilia: sexual attraction to (or pleasure from) feces

Covert incestiphilia: arousal from non-contact sexual behavior with a child

Crush fetish: sexual arousal from seeing small creatures being crushed by members of the opposite sex, or being crushed oneself

Dacryphilia: sexual pleasure in eliciting tears from others or oneself

Dendrophilia: sexual attraction to trees and other large plants, popularized by the movie ''Superstar'' with Molly Shannon

Emetophilia (a.k.a. ''vomerophilia''): sexual attraction to vomit

Emoaningphilia: Sexual arousal from textual imitations of moaning through instant messaging

Endosomataphillia sexual fetish of being within someone- usually associated with vorarephilia

Endytophilia: preferring to have sexual activity while fully clothed

Ephebophilia (a.k.a. ''hebephilia''): sexual attraction towards adolescents

Eproctophilia: sexual attraction to flatulence

Erotophonophilia(also know as ''Homicidophilia'' or ''Lust murderism''): sexual arousal from committing (or trying to commit) murder; see also Lust murder

Exhibitionism: (a.k.a ''peodeiktophilia'') sexual arousal through sexual behavior in view of third parties (also includes the recurrent urge or behavior to expose one's genitals to an unsuspecting person)

Faunoiphilia: sexual arousal from watching animals mate

Fecophile: sexual arousal from defacation or watching a partner defecate, particularly on oneself.

Fetishism: is the use of non-sexual or nonliving objects or part of a person's body to gain sexual excitement. Examples include:
::Balloon fetishism -- breast fetishism -- bike fetish -- foot fetishism (podophilia) -- fur fetishism -- leather fetishism -- lipstick fetishism -- medical fetishism -- panty fetishism -- robot fetishism -- rubber fetishism -- shoe fetishism -- smoking fetishism -- spandex fetishism -- dental braces fetishism -- transvestic fetishism (see below)

Formicophilia: sexual attraction to smaller animals, insects, etc. crawling on parts of the body

Forniphilia: sexual objectification in which a person's body is incorporated into a piece of furniture

Frotteurism: sexual arousal from the recurrent urge or behavior of touching or rubbing against a nonconsenting person

Galactophilia: (a.k.a ''lactophilia'') sexual attraction to human milk or lactating women

Gerontophilia: sexual attraction towards the elderly

Gigantopithicus Fetish : sexual arousal to abnormally tall individuals

Gynemimetophilia: love of men dressed as women or who have had a sex change; see also andromimetophilia

Gynophagia: sexual attraction toward eating a woman

Haematophilia: sexual attraction involving blood (either on another person or the liquid itself; not to be confused with haemophilia, a genetic disorder of the blood)

Harpaxophilia: sexual arousal from being the victim of a robbery or burglary; see also chrematistophilia

Heterochromophilia: sexual attraction towards people of different skin colour

Homeovestism: sexual attraction towards the clothing of one's own gender

Hybristophilia: sexual arousal to people who have committed crimes, in particular cruel or outrageous crimes

Hypephilia: sexual attraction to fabrics

Hypnofetishism: sexual arousal to being hypnotized, hypnotizing others or viewing others being hypnotized (usually directed in a popular cultural depiction of mind control, hypnosis or brainwashing)

Incestophilia: sexual attraction to one's own family

Infantilism: sexual pleasure from dressing, acting, or being treated as a baby

Katoptronophilia: sexual arousal from having sex in front of mirrors

Kleptophilia: sexual arousal from stealing things

Klismaphilia: sexual pleasure from enemas

Koumpounophilia: sexual arousal from buttons

Lipophilia: sexual attraction to obese individuals

Ludophilia: is the paraphilia of being sexually or emotionally attracted to games (or in more recent years Video Games).

Macrophilia: sexual attraction to larger people and large things (including larger body organs such as breasts and genitalia)

Maiesiophilia: sexual attraction to childbirth or pregnant women

Masochism: the recurrent urge or behavior of wanting to be humiliated, beaten, bound, or otherwise made to suffer

Mechaphilia: sexual attraction to machines, especially robots or androids

Microphilia: sexual attraction to smaller people and things of smaller size

Minifellaphilia : sexual attraction to little people

Mysophilia: sexual attraction to soiled, dirty, foul or decaying material

Natural Body Magic (NBM): sexual arousal from 'box and blade' illusions (such as sawing a woman in half)

Narratophilia: sexual arousal in the use of dirty or obscene words to a partner

Nasophilia: sexual attraction to the sight, touch of human noses

Necropedophilia: sexual attraction to the corpses of children

Necrophilia: sexual attraction to corpses

Necrozoophilia: (a.k.a ''necrobestiality'') sexual attraction to the corpses or killings of animals

Nepiophilia: (a.k.a. infantophilia) sexual attraction to children three years old or younger

Olafactophilia: sexual stimulus with smells or odors

Parthenophilia: sexual attraction to virgins

Partial Unbirthing: sexual attraction to inserting an adult head into a vagina

Pecattiphilia: sexual arousal from sinning or guilt

Pediophilia: sexual attraction to dolls

Pedophilia: sexual attraction to prepubescent children (British spelling: paedophilia)

Phalloorchoalgolagnia: sexual arousal by the experiencing of painful stimuli being administered to the male genitals

Pictophilia: sexual attraction to pictorial pornography or erotic art

Plushophilia: sexual attraction to stuffed toys or people in animal costume, such as theme park characters

Pyrophilia: sexual arousal through watching, setting, hearing, talking or fantasizing about fire

Raptophilia: sexually attracted to the idea of being raped; see also biastophilia

Retifism: sexual arousal from shoes

Sadism: deriving pleasure, or in some cases sexual arousal from giving pain

Saliromania: sexual arousal or satisfaction of soiling or damaging a partner’s clothing

Savantophilia: sexual arousal to mentally challenged individuals

Schediaphilia (a.k.a. ''toonophilia''): love of (or sexual arousal from) cartoon characters or situations; see moe

Scoptophilia: sexual pleasure from watching other people have sex; not to be confused with voyeurism

Sitophilia: sexual arousal from food

Somnophilia: sexual arousal from sleeping or unconscious people

Spectrophilia: sexual attraction to ghosts

Stigmatophilia: sexual focus on a partner who is tattooed or scarred

Stygiophilia: sexual pleasure from the thought of going to hell

Symphorophilia: sexual attraction with stage-managing a disaster, such as a traffic accident

Telephone scatologia: being sexually aroused by making obscene telephone calls to strangers

Telephonicophilia: sexual arousal in explicit phone conversations

Teratophilia: sexual attraction to deformed or monstrous people

Toonophilia: (a.k.a. ''schediaphilia'') sexual attraction to cartoons or anime characters

Transformation fetish: sexual arousal from depictions of transformations of people into objects or other beings

Transvestic fetishism: (a.k.a ''transvestitism'') sexual attraction towards the clothing of the opposite gender

Trichophilia: sexual arousal from hair

Troilism: sharing a sexual partner with another person while looking on

Urolagnia: sexual attraction to urine, including urinating in public, urinating on others, and being urinated on by others

Urophagia: sexual attraction to drinking urine or watching others drink urine

Vincilagnia: sexual arousal by bondage

Vomerophilia: (a.k.a. ''emetophilia'') sexual attraction to the act of vomiting

Vorarephilia: sexual attraction to being eaten by, and/or eating, another person or creature

Voyeurism: sexual arousal through secretly watching others having sex (also includes the recurrent urge or behavior to observe an unsuspecting person who is naked, disrobing or engaging in sexual activities, see peeping tom)

Wing Fetishism: sexual attraction to wings, often angels/demons

Wind Fetish: sexual attraction to being blown by the wind

Xenophilia: sexual attraction to foreigners (in science fiction, can also mean sexual attraction to aliens)

Xylophilia: sexual attraction to wood

Zelophilia: sexual arousal from jealousy

Zoophilia: emotional or sexual attraction to animals

Zoosadism: the sexual enjoyment of causing pain and suffering to animals
Note:
#Sadism and masochism are often grouped together, under "sado-masochism", as a clinical term; see also algolagnia. As a ''lifestyle interest'', see BDSM (bondage & discipline, domination & submission, and sadism & masochism.)

See also



-philia (list of philias)

Sexual fetishism

Kink (sexual)

Psychosexual development

Human sexuality

Developmental psychology

Human development

Sex crime

Dorian Gray syndrome

John Money

Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing for history of classifying sexual object choice as a disease

External links



DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR list of paraphilias

Notes


1. American Psychiatric Association (2000). ''Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-IV (4th ed., text revision). Pp. 566-567. ''
2. http://psyweb.com/Mdisord/DSM_IV/jsp/Axis_I.jsp
3. http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/159/7/1249


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