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Dermatophagia. Dermatophagia (from Ancient Greek δέρμα — lit. skin and φαγεία lit. eating) or dermatodaxia (from δήξις, lit. biting) [3] is a compulsion disorder of gnawing or biting one's own skin, most commonly at the fingers. This action can either be conscious or unconscious [4] and it is considered to be a type of pica.
Specialty. Dermatology. Psychiatry. Excoriation disorder, more commonly known as dermatillomania, is a mental disorder on the obsessive–compulsive spectrum that is characterized by the repeated urge or impulse to pick at one's own skin, to the extent that either psychological or physical damage is caused. [4] [5]
Goin' South was John Belushi's second film—after Animal House—having been a Saturday Night Live cast member for several years. It was the second of three films directed by Nicholson, the first was 1971's Drive, He Said and the third was the Chinatown sequel The Two Jakes, released in 1990. This marks the first film in which Nicholson ...
The “Flamin’ Hot” director also shares that she does not have a sweet tooth. “I don’t like desserts and sweets,” she says. “I don’t like sweet things. Dessert comes and people go ...
For people looking to grow $100,000 into a $1 million retirement nest egg, the following three steps can speed up your progress. Someone holding cash in one hand and a smartphone in the other hand ...
ID theft swelled during the pandemic when the federal government delivered $5 trillion in relief to businesses and households through stimulus checks, enhanced unemployment benefits and food aid ...
South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Rail bridge, part of the Port Melbourne railway line. Strikes of the bridge are the subject of a website, frequent local media reports, and a song. A bus driver was imprisoned for injuring passengers by driving into the bridge.
The phrase, which Perot coined during the 1992 US presidential campaign, referred to the sound of US jobs heading south for Mexico should the free-trade agreement go into effect. In the second 1992 Presidential Debate, Ross Perot argued: We have got to stop sending jobs overseas.