DSM-5 paraphilic disorders criteria in the light of autoerotic asphyxiophilia and non-sexual form of oxygen restriction.

The fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders published in 2013 has proved to be particularly interesting in the field of sexuality. It introduced a number of significant changes in the definition of sexual norms, among them a widely discussed distinction between paraphilias and paraphilic disorders. The key criterion separating the abnormal sexual interests from the disordered ones is clinically significant distress resulting directly from sexual behavior and/or the risk of suffering or harm to another person as a result of one's sexual behavior. In the case of masochism - which addresses the phenomenon of suffering quite particularly - this distinction is troublesome. Using the example of autoerotic asphyxia - a behavior from the masochism spectrum - the authors critically examine the proposed DSM-5 method of defining the standards of sexual behavior. Interesting in this regard has been a comparison between autoerotic asphyxia and free diving - a nonsexual activity which, although also associated with possible loss of life by reduction of oxygen, has not been pathologized.

[1]  C. Moser DSM-5 and the Paraphilic Disorders: Conceptual Issues , 2016, Archives of sexual behavior.

[2]  A. Giami Between DSM and ICD: Paraphilias and the Transformation of Sexual Norms , 2015, Archives of sexual behavior.

[3]  L. Downing Heteronormativity and Repronormativity in Sexological “Perversion Theory” and the DSM-5’s “Paraphilic Disorder” Diagnoses , 2015, Archives of sexual behavior.

[4]  Lindsey E. Wylie,et al.  Disputed Paraphilia Diagnoses and Legal Decision Making: A Case Law Survey of Paraphilia NOS, Nonconsent , 2014 .

[5]  J. Wakefield DSM-5 proposed diagnostic criteria for sexual paraphilias: tensions between diagnostic validity and forensic utility. , 2011, International journal of law and psychiatry.

[6]  C. Moser,et al.  Why are the paraphilias mental disorders? , 2011, The journal of sexual medicine.

[7]  C. Moser Yet Another Paraphilia Definition Fails , 2011, Archives of sexual behavior.

[8]  Susan Wright Depathologizing Consensual Sexual Sadism, Sexual Masochism, Transvestic Fetishism, and Fetishism , 2010, Archives of sexual behavior.

[9]  Niklas Långström The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Exhibitionism, Voyeurism, and Frotteurism , 2010, Archives of sexual behavior.

[10]  R. Blanchard The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Transvestic Fetishism , 2010, Archives of sexual behavior.

[11]  D. D. Cowell Autoerotic Asphyxiation: Secret Pleasure—Lethal Outcome? , 2009, Pediatrics.

[12]  Juliet Richters,et al.  Demographic and psychosocial features of participants in bondage and discipline, "sadomasochism" or dominance and submission (BDSM): data from a national survey. , 2008, The journal of sexual medicine.

[13]  A. Sauvageau Autoerotic deaths: a seven-year retrospective epidemiological study , 2008 .

[14]  L. Ridgway,et al.  Apnea Diving: Long-Term Neurocognitive Sequelae of Repeated Hypoxemia , 2006, The Clinical neuropsychologist.

[15]  G. Manley,et al.  Sexual Behavior Disorders: Proposed New Classification in the DSM-V , 2001 .

[16]  J. Uva Review: autoerotic asphyxiation in the United States. , 1995, Journal of forensic sciences.

[17]  R. Blanchard,et al.  Death scene characteristics in 118 fatal cases of autoerotic asphyxia compared with suicidal asphyxia , 1992 .

[18]  S. Hostiuc,et al.  Autoerotic asphyxial hanging - case presentation , 2009 .

[19]  A. J. Cooper Auto-erotic asphyxiation: three case reports. , 1996, Journal of sex & marital therapy.

[20]  Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers , 1996 .

[21]  K. Margolius,et al.  Autoerotic Deaths: Four cases , 1994, Pathology.

[22]  L. Brink,et al.  Sadism and masochism : the psychology of hatred and cruelty , 1953 .