| Literature DB >> 29479321 |
Juan Carlos Martínez-Aguayo1,2, Renzo C Lanfranco3,4, Marcelo Arancibia2,5,6, Elisa Sepúlveda1,7, Eva Madrid2,5,6.
Abstract
In this article, we describe the case of a girl who suffers from a phobia to repetitive patterns, known as trypophobia. This condition has not yet been recognised by diagnostic taxonomies such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Trypophobia usually involves an intense and disproportionate fear towards holes, repetitive patterns, protrusions, etc., and, in general, images that present high-contrast energy at low and midrange spatial frequencies. It is commonly accompanied by neurovegetative symptoms. In the case we present here, the patient also suffered from generalised anxiety disorder and was treated with sertraline. After she was diagnosed, she showed symptoms of both fear and disgust towards trypophobic images. After some time following treatment, she only showed disgust towards said images. We finish this case report presenting a comprehensive literature review of the peer reviewed articles we retrieved after an exhaustive search about trypophobia, we discuss how this case report contributes to the understanding of this anxiety disorder, and what questions future studies should address in order to achieve a better understanding of trypophobia.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety disorders; biological evolution; biological mimicry; fear; phobic disorders; trypophobia; visual perception
Year: 2018 PMID: 29479321 PMCID: PMC5811467 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1(A) Bathroom wall in repair that triggered phobic symptoms according to the patient. (B) Drawing made by the patient after being asked: “how would you draw your fear?”
Figure 2Sidewalks with surface patterns which triggered phobic reactions according to the patient’s mother. (A) Sidewalk with stones in the concrete yielding little phobic reaction. (B) Sidewalk with stones in the concrete that caused high phobic reaction with neurovegetative symptoms.
Figure 3Objects with surface patterns which triggered phobic reactions according to the patient’s mother: (A,B) holes in a slice of bread, (C) pattern of holes in a piece of metal, (D) Sharp spikes on the meringue frosting of a pie.
Summary of studies, instruments, and contributions about trypophobia.
| Reference | Type of sample | Instruments employed | Main findings and contributions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rufo ( | Case report | Psychiatrist’s report | First available description about a girl who expressed panic when facing any image of repetitive patterns, specially holes |
| Cole and Wilkins ( | General population of adults and adults who claim to suffer from trypophobia | Rating scales, spectral analysis | All trypophobic images possess high-contrast energy in midrange spatial frequencies, a feature also shared by images of poisonous animals. People in general experience discomfort when looking at trypophobic images |
| Le et al. ( | General population of adults and adults who claim to suffer from trypophobia (Facebook group) | Rating scales, questionnaire | The construction of the TQ and the presentation of its psychometric properties. They confirm that people who suffer from high levels of trypophobia are more sensitive to images with high-contrast energy in midrange spatial frequencies. Both images of holes and bumps can trigger trypophobic symptoms. Also, the bigger the cluster, the higher the trypophobic response |
| Chaya et al. ( | General population of adults (recruited online) | TQ, Liebowitz Social Anxiety (SA) Scale, Discomfort Rating Score | SA has a significant indirect effect on the discomfort associated with eye clusters, which was mediated by trypophobia. The same happens with clusters of faces. The results suggest both SA and trypophobia contribute to the discomfort some people experience when gazed by many people |
| Imaizumi et al. ( | General population of adults (recruited online) | TQ, Disgust Scale-Revised, Interpersonal Reactivity Index | Trypophobia proneness is predicted by core disgust sensitivity, personal distress, and proneness to visual discomfort |
| Vlok-Barnard and Stein ( | Adults who claim to suffer from trypophobia (Facebook group) | Self-report questionnaire, Kessler Psychological Distress Scale, Sheehan Disability Scale, and items from Zohar–Fineberg Obsessive–Compulsive Screen and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders -5 criteria for Specific phobias | Trypophobic symptoms are chronic and persistent and cause significant distress. The most common co-morbidity diagnoses are major depressive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. The most common trypophobic symptom is disgust rather than fear when confronted with trypophobic images |
| Can et al. ( | 4-year-old children randomly recruited | Self-report, categorization task | Trypophobic stimuli are associated with discomfort in children due the visual features of said stimuli. The results suggest that such discomfort is due to an instinctive response to the stimuli visual features rather than the result of a learned but non-conscious association with venomous animals |
| Kupfer and Le ( | General population of adults and adults who claim to suffer from trypophobia (Facebook group) | Fear and disgust self-report scales, Three Domain Disgust Scale, Neuroticism subscale (from Big Five Inventory) | Both people who suffer from trypophobia and who did not report aversion towards disease-relevant cluster stimuli, but only the trypophobic group reported aversion towards objectively harmless cluster stimuli that had no relevance to disease. Aversive responses were predominantly based on disgust |
| Sasaki et al. ( | General population of adults | TQ, Discomfort scale | Trypophobic discomfort can be caused both by mid- and low-frequency visual components |
| Yamada and Sasaki ( | General population of adults (recruited online) | Discomfort surveys | Discomfort evoked by trypophobic images is higher amongst participants with history of skin problems |