Nail biting, also known as onychophagy or onychophagia, is an human mouth compulsive habit of biting one's fingernails. It is sometimes described as a parafunctional activity, the use of the mouth for an activity other than speaking, eating, or drinking.
Nail biting is a common habit, with it being present in approximately 20-30% of the population, and that statistic only increases to ~37% when explicitly reviewing the ages three to twenty-one year-old demographic. More pathological forms of nail biting are considered impulse control disorders in the DSM-IV and are classified under obsessive-compulsive and related disorders in the DSM-5. The ICD-10 classifies the practice as "other specified behavioral and emotional disorders with onset usually occurring in childhood and adolescence". However, not all nail biting is pathological, and the difference between harmful obsession and normal behavior is not always clear. The earliest reference to nail biting as a symptom of anxiety was in the late sixteenth century in France.
Nail biting may have an association with oral problems, such as injury, and malocclusion of the anterior teeth. It can also transfer or bacteria buried under the surface of the nail from the Human anus region to the human mouth. If the bitten-off nails are swallowed, stomach problems can occasionally develop.
Nail-biting can be a source of guilt and shame feelings in the nail biter, a reduced quality of life, and increased Social stigma in the inner family circles or at a more societal level. Beyond that, however, there is no research to verify long-term consequences that could be attributed to nail biting alone. [1]
In children, nail biting most typically co-occurs with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (75% co-occurrence among one psychiatrically referred cohort of nail biters) and other psychiatric disorders including oppositional defiant disorder (36%) and separation anxiety disorder (21%). It is also more common among children and adolescents with obsessive–compulsive disorder. Nail biting appeared in a study to be more common in men with than in those without them.
Behavioral therapy is beneficial when simpler measures are not effective. Habit reversal training (HRT), which seeks to unlearn the habit of nail biting and possibly replace it with a more constructive habit, has shown its effectiveness versus placebo in children and adults. A study in children showed that results with HRT were superior to either no treatment at all or the manipulation of objects as an alternative behavior, which is another possible approach to treatment. In addition to HRT, stimulus control therapy is used to both identify and then eliminate the stimulus that frequently triggers biting urges. Other behavioral techniques that have been investigated with preliminary positive results are self-help techniques, such as decoupling and the use of wristbands as non-removable reminders. More recently, technology companies have begun producing wearable devices and smart watch applications that track the position of users' hands, but no research has been published so far.[2]
Another treatment for chronic nail biters is the usage of a dental deterrent device that prevents the front teeth from damaging the nails and the surrounding cuticles. After about two months, the device leads to a full oppression of the nail biting urge.
Evidence on the efficacy of drugs is very limited, and they are not routinely used. A small double-blind randomized clinical trial in children and adolescents indicated that N-acetylcysteine, a glutathione and glutamate modulator, could, in the short term only, be more effective than placebo in decreasing the nail-biting behavior.
Artificial nails can help to ameliorate nail biting social effects.
Independently of the method used, parental education is useful in the case of young nail biters to maximize the efficacy of the treatment programs, as some behaviors by the parents or other family members may be helping to perpetuate the problem. For example, punishments have been shown not to be better than placebo, and in some cases may even increase the nail biting frequency.
Related disorders
Treatment
Epidemiology
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