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Pyrophilia is a relatively uncommon paraphilia in which the patient derives gratification from fire and fire-starting activity. It is distinguished from pyromania by the gratification being of a sexual nature.

Description[]

While the erotic focus immediately raises the dianostic issue of pyromania, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental Disorders IV classifies this disorder as an impluse-control disorder, with nothing to indicate or suggest an overlap between this disorder and the paraphilias.

Other than the purposeful act of fire-setting itself, there is no mention of the possibility that the tension or affective arousal experienced before the act; the fascination with, interest in, attraction to fire and its situational contexts (for exemple, paraphernalia, uses, consequences); or the pleasure, gratification, or relief when setting, witnessing, or participating in the afternath of fires might be sexual in nautre or even contain a sexual arousal component.

Some described cases of pyrophilia do not include behaviors commonly associated with pyromania, such as being a regular "watcher" at fires in his neighbourhood; setting off false alarms; deriving pleasure from institutions, equipement, and personnel associated with fire, spending time at the local fire station, setting fires in order to be affiliated with the fire departement; and either showing indifference to the consequences to life and property caused b the fire or deriving satisfication from the resulting destruction of property. Sexual gratification need not involve actual fire; arousal or masturbatory aids may include fantasies or talk of setting a fire. In other instances, the pateint may derive arousal primarily from setting or watching their fire.

Pyrophilia has been diagnoses in very few instances, and is not few instances, and is not fully accepted by the genare al psychological community.

See also[]

References[]

  • Larry C. Litman (February 1999). A case of pyrophilia. CPA Bulletin: 18–20.
  • Bourget, D. and Bradford, John McDonald Wilson (1987). Fire fetishism, diagnostic and clinical implications: A review of two cases. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 32 (6): 459–462.
  • Balachandra, K. and Swaminath, Sam (2002). Fire Fetishism in a Female Arsonist?. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 47 (5)., in Letters to the Editor

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