Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Clare Dyer A surgeon in Scotland amputated the legs of two psychologically
disturbed men who had nothing physically wrong with them but felt a
"desperate" need to be amputees, it emerged this week.
Both men, one from England and one from Germany, had a rare type of
body dysmorphic disorder known as apotemnophilia, in which patients are
convinced from childhood that they will be normal only once a limb has
been removed. The obsession is always with the removal of a specific
limb, and each patient had a leg amputated above the knee.
The operations were carried out in September 1997 and April 1999 at an
NHS hospital, Falkirk and District Royal Infirmary, by consultant
surgeon Robert Smith. Both men had been turned away by other doctors.
The chairman and board members of Forth Valley Acute Hospitals NHS
Trust, which runs the hospital, were unaware of the operations at the
time. They only learnt of them last summer when Mr Smith informed the
trust's new chief executive, Jim Currie, that he was involved in
assessing a third patient, an American.
This week the trust announced a ban on further amputations after a
report from its ethics subcommittee. Mr Smith had obtained the
agreement of the then chief executive and medical director, both of
whom have since changed jobs, before performing the two operations.
He also discussed the procedure with his defence body and with the
ethics committee of the General Medical Council. The patients, who had
failed to respond to conventional treatment, were assessed and
counselled beforehand by psychiatrists and a psychologist.
Mr Smith told the BMJ that he accepted no fee for the operations,
though the hospital was paid £3000 ($4800). "The money went back
into the NHS."
He said that there were two groups of patients who wanted to have limbs
amputated. The larger group found the concept sexually arousing. But
both patients on whom he operated were a small subgroup who wanted the
operation because they felt incomplete with four limbs but would feel
complete with three.
Patients with the disorder often resorted to self harm He said that the patients' lives had been transformed by losing a limb
and they were delighted with their new state. Both had had artificial
limbs fitted, though they did not always wear them.
Earlier, he told a press conference at the hospital: "At the end of
the day I have no doubt that what I was doing was the correct thing for
those patients."
The trust's chairman, Ian Mullen, said such operations were not ruled
out for the future, but a strict procedure would have to be followed.
for example, by
shooting their leg off or lying on a railway track, added Mr Smith.
"They are a very strange group of people who have had this obsession
since childhood. The more I saw these patients, the more I realised
this was an extremely distressing and disabling condition."
Read all Rapid Responses