Xenomelia Conference--Zurich
Posted: Fri Oct 02, 2015 10:14 am
In March of 2013, a two-day international conference on Xenomelia (Body Integrity Identity Disorder) was held at University Hospital Zurich. The conference program and all of the Powerpoint slides used in the presentations are available as a 24 meg. download at:
http://www.fortbildung.usz.ch/pdf/FS201 ... omelie.pdf
Some of the presentations are difficult to understand from the slides alone, but most are very clear.
Since many of the members here seem to fit a xenomelia diagnosis, this might be a good opportunity to use this thread to comment on what the "experts" are seeing. What I find most interesting is that they completely avoid any discussion of male genitals, even though I had been in email communication with both Peter Brugger and Michael First about how common it is and how well it fits a xenomelia diagnosis well before the conference. This, even though at the 2009 conference when it was titled Body Integrity Identity Disorder, a presentation by Marian Swindell and Jan St. Lawrence attempted to count all examples that could be found in the medical literature. They determined that male genitals were the most frequent body parts effected. Left lower limbs were second in frequency in the medical literature.
http://www.fortbildung.usz.ch/pdf/FS201 ... omelie.pdf
Some of the presentations are difficult to understand from the slides alone, but most are very clear.
Since many of the members here seem to fit a xenomelia diagnosis, this might be a good opportunity to use this thread to comment on what the "experts" are seeing. What I find most interesting is that they completely avoid any discussion of male genitals, even though I had been in email communication with both Peter Brugger and Michael First about how common it is and how well it fits a xenomelia diagnosis well before the conference. This, even though at the 2009 conference when it was titled Body Integrity Identity Disorder, a presentation by Marian Swindell and Jan St. Lawrence attempted to count all examples that could be found in the medical literature. They determined that male genitals were the most frequent body parts effected. Left lower limbs were second in frequency in the medical literature.