Dermatitis artefacta in a 60 year old man: a case report
P. Setién Preciados, C. Díaz Mayoral, E. Arroyo Sánchez

TL;DR
This case report discusses a 60-year-old man with dermatitis artefacta, a rare condition where individuals intentionally cause skin damage, highlighting its diagnostic and management challenges.
Contribution
The paper presents a rare case of dermatitis artefacta in an older male patient, emphasizing the need for better management guidelines.
Findings
Dermatitis artefacta is characterized by self-inflicted skin lesions in accessible areas that do not align with organic disease patterns.
Multidisciplinary approaches, including cognitive behavioral therapy, are beneficial in managing patients with factitious disorders.
The condition is rare and often under-recognized, leading to repeated hospitalizations and poor outcomes.
Abstract
Dermatitis artefacta (DA), also known as factitial dermatitis, is a condition among factitious disorders, whereby self-induced skin damage is the means used to satisfy a conscious or unconscious desire to assume the sick role, particularly in those with an underlying psychiatric diagnosis or external stress. DA should be distinguished from malingering, in which skin damage may be inflicted for the purpose of secondary gain. Review what dermatitis artefacta and factitious disorders in general consist of and the challenges they present. Presentation of a patient’s case and review of existing literature, in regards to factitial dermatitis and factitious disorders. In general, in regards to factitious disorders in literature, the majority of patients were female with mean age at presentation at thirty. A healthcare or laboratory profession was reported most frequently, as well as a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Abuse and Related Trauma · Restraint-Related Deaths · Traumatic Ocular and Foreign Body Injuries
