Sadism
What is sadism?
Sadism is a sexual disorder. People who have sadism are aroused by causing physical, mental, or emotional pain or suffering to another person. Sadism may be so severe that it leads to a crime.
How does it occur?
The exact cause of this disorder is not known. Experts think it may be caused by differences in the brain or nervous system. It might also be related to things such as child abuse or a family history of mental illness.
Sexual sadism is more common in males. Sadism usually begins in the teen years or by early adulthood. It may start with sadistic play or fantasies in childhood.
What are the symptoms?
People with this disorder may always need to cause pain or humiliation in order to function sexually. Or they may have normal sex at some times and sadistic sex at other times. Their sexual arousal is directly related to how much their partner suffers. Sadists often seek out masochists as sexual partners.
Some acts are physically violent, such as cutting, burning, or beating. Other acts involve domination, such as making the other person crawl or keeping him or her in a cage. Still other acts involve humiliation.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms, relationships, medical history, and substance abuse history. He or she will also ask whether you or someone close to you has a history of mental illness. Your provider may also do a physical exam and order tests to rule out medical conditions as a cause of your symptoms.
People may be diagnosed with sadism if the fantasies, urges, or behaviors cause distress or keep them from being able to function in school, on the job, or in relationships. They may be diagnosed with sadism even if partners are willing.
How is it treated?
Conditioning therapy can be an effective way to treat this disorder. There are several kinds of conditioning therapy:
- Covert sensitization. You first relax and picture scenes that excite you. Then you imagine something negative, such as getting your skin stuck in a zipper.
- Assisted aversive conditioning. In this form of therapy, the negative event is real rather than imagined. For example, your therapist sprays a bad smell such as ammonia in the air. The goal is for you to link your actions with something negative and avoid both.
- Empathy training. This may help you understand and identify with the victim, so that you understand how the victim has been harmed.
Antiandrogens (which reduce male sex hormone levels) and medicines such as Prozac increase the brain chemical serotonin and reduce obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.
When should I seek help?
If your symptoms are seriously interfering with your daily life or hurting someone else, seek help from your healthcare provider or a mental health therapist. At the extreme, sexual sadism may involve brutal rape, torture, or death of the victim in order to reach sexual excitement. Many sadists do not get help until they are caught by the police and the court orders treatment. If you or someone you care about is a sadist, get help early.
For more information, contact:
- National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI)
Phone: 1-800-950-NAMI
Web site: http://www.nami.org - Mental Health America
Phone: 1-800-969-6642
Web site: http://www.mentalhealthamerica.net
Disclaimer: This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health information becomes available. The information provided is intended to be informative and educational and is not a replacement for professional medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional.
HIA File beha3355.htm Release 13/2010
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