# The hidden side of body integrity dysphoria: aberrant limbic responses to dynamic touch

**Authors:** Laura Zapparoli, Eraldo Paulesu, Martina Gandola, Gerardo Salvato, Gianluca Saetta, Marika Mariano, Francantonio Devoto, Silvia Amaryllis Claudia Squarza, Mariangela Piano, Peter Brugger, Gabriella Bottini

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf209 · Brain Communications · 2025-05-28

## TL;DR

People with body integrity dysphoria experience abnormal brain activity in reward and emotional regions when their desired amputation site is touched, linking body perception to emotional distress.

## Contribution

This study is the first to connect BID to the brain's reward system through limbic hyperactivation during tactile stimulation.

## Key findings

- Individuals with BID showed heightened limbic and reward-related brain activations when their affected limb was stimulated.
- Hyperactivation was most pronounced when stimulation crossed the desired amputation line.
- Increased premotor cortex and anterior cingulum activity indicated attentional arousal at the amputation site.

## Abstract

Body integrity dysphoria (BID) is a brain-based disorder characterized by a persistent, obsessing and disturbing desire for the amputation of healthy limbs. Importantly, individuals with BID are adamant about which specific body segment they wish to have amputated and the exact level at which the amputation should occur. The condition has been linked to altered resting-state brain functional connectivity and task-based activity at the level of somatosensory cortices. However, the inevitable distress associated with the condition has not been explained by current neurophysiological data. In this functional MRI (fMRI) study, we studied individuals with a lifelong desire for the amputation of their left leg using a dynamic somatosensory stimulation paradigm. We identified and marked the desired line of amputation on the BID individuals’ left leg and a corresponding point on their right leg. We measured brain activations in response to stimulation of the lower limbs while participants were instructed to focus on the tactile sensations and detect when the stimulation crossed the line of the desired amputation. Compared with healthy controls focusing on the same segments of their legs, individuals with BID showed higher neural activations specifically for the stimulation of their left leg in a large cortical and subcortical neural network primarily associated with rewarding and pain stimuli. Some of these hyperactivations were particularly marked immediately after the stimulation had passed over the line of the desired amputation. When the stimulation crossed the desired point of amputation, there were also increased activations in the premotor cortices and the anterior cingulum, a sign of premotor attentional arousal. Our data show a pathological relationship between altered neural representations of the body map and the brain reward system, connecting BID to the visceral brain for the first time.

Zapparoli et al. reported that individuals with body integrity dysphoria (BID) show heightened limbic and reward-related brain activations in response to tactile stimulation of the affected limb. These findings suggest that BID involves altered somatosensory and affective processing, linking body representation disturbances to the brain’s emotional and reward systems.

Graphical Abstract

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** body integrity dysphoria (MONDO:0850100)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146), brain-based disorder (MESH:D001927), BID (MESH:D000081042)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

46 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12150211/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12150211