Autoerotic death: a rare but recurrent entity
Roger W. Byard
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R. W. Byard (&) Discipline of Anatomy and Pathology, Level 3 Medical School North Building, The University of Adelaide
, Frome Road, Adelaide 5005,
Australia
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R. W. Byard School of Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide
, Adelaide,
Australia
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Autoerotic death has been defined as accidental death
occurring during solitary sexual activity that results from a
malfunction or an unexpected effect of a device/material or
substance that was being used to augment the experience
[1]. Although it has been recognized for over 200 years [2],
cases in the literature have previously been mistaken for
suicide, and a clear definition was not published until 1991
[3]. While our understanding of this entity has improved,
diagnostic difficulties persist and there appears to have
been recent changes in epidemiological features in certain
communities.
A variety of different activities may be used to enhance
sexual excitement that may be potentially lethal, including
cross-dressing in conditions of extreme heat and inserting
rectal and genital foreign bodies, however the majority of
fatalities involve activities that induce asphyxia [4, 5]. The
basis for this is that oxygen deprivation augments the
sexual response in certain individuals, giving rise to a
variety of techniques being used to induce hypoxia during
solitary or shared sexual activity. Given the often elaborate
paraphernalia that is found at death scenes in cases of
autoerotic asphyxia it is clear, however, that there are also
often quite prominent elements of fetishism, bondage and
masochism. An important point in cases of autoerotic death
is that the manner of death is accidental. This means that
cases where death has occurred from underlying organic
illness such as cardiovascular disease should not be
included within this group [3].
One of the features used to diagnose autoerotic death is
the presence of a fail safe device at the scene [6]. This
refers to a mechanism that enables the practitioner to free
him or herself from any device that was being utilized to
induce asphyxia. Unfortunately fail safe devices are often
quite fallible and following their failure, unconsciousness
may develop very rapidly if the neck is compressed
preventing self extrication [7].
Certain problems may arise in making the diagnosis of
autoerotic death. By its very nature the activity is secretive,
and so its practice by the victim may have been completely
unknown to family members, who may then strongly resist
the suggestion. Family members or friends may also alter
the findings at the death scene before investigating police
attend, due to the perceived stigma attached to such a
death. Cases involving females are rare and are made more
difficult by the lack of props and sexual paraphernalia that
characterize such activities in males [810]. Studies have
shown that practitioners may be depressed and so there
exists the possibility that an individual who has previously
engaged in this type of activity may elect to use this as a
method of suicide. In the absence of a suicide note, or other
evidence of a deliberate self destructive act, this possibility
may be overlooked [11]. While the Choking Game
played by adolescents to induce a euphoric effect uses
hypoxia, it is distinguished from autoerotic activities by the
absence of associated sexual activities [12].
Although the finding of a complex apparatus at a death
scene may point to an autoerotic misadventure, certain
suicides may also be characterized by very elaborate
preparation with unusual devices [13]. However, careful
assessment of the death scene should enable differentiation
between these two events. One of the features at the death
scene that may be useful in establishing the diagnosis of
autoerotic misadventure may be evidence of repetitive
activity of a similar nature. This may be in the form of
worn grooves from ropes around an overhead beam in the
garden shed where the decedent was found [1].
Unfortunately attempts to find tissue markers of previous hypoxic
event in cases of known fatal sexual asphyxia have failed
[14].
Typical cases of sexual asphyxia in the literature have
involved young males aged between 15 and 25 years with
an estimated incidence of 24 cases per million in the
United States, and 12 cases per million in Scandinavia
[15, 16]. A recent review of national Australian and
Swedish data, however, showed a lower rate (of
approximately 0.3 cases per million of the population per year),
with the most common age of the Australian victims being
between 30 and 39 years [17]. Certainly death from sexual
asphyxia has occurred in the elderly [18], however the
Australian data may indicate that the epidemiological
features of autoerotic death vary depending on the
particular community that is being studied. This is something to
be born in mind in the evaluation of cases. A marked male
predominance has been a feature of all studies to date.
Although it is well recognized, autoerotic death remains
a relatively rare entity characterized by unusual sexual
behavior utilizing a wide variety of lethal mechanisms that
most often involve asphyxia. While the typical case is of a
young cross-dressing male found hanging in an isolated
place surrounded by pornography, distinct variations from
this stereotype occur [19]. The isolated nature of the
activity may also result in artifacts from decomposition
arising that may complicate the assessment of possible
injuries. Differences in presentation should be borne in
mind when unusual cases of hanging are being evaluated so
that sexual asphyxia will not be overlooked.
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