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Doctors: Pedophile 'Cured' After Surgery
Associated Press ^ | July 28, 2003 | CHRIS KAHN

Posted on 07/28/2003 6:45:18 AM PDT by Pharmboy

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - There was something wrong with the schoolteacher with the headache — doctors could see that from the start.

Though charming and intelligent, the 40-year-old man couldn't stop leering at female nurses. He had been in trouble with the law for sexual advances toward his stepdaughter, and now he was talking about raping his landlady.

University of Virginia Medical Center neurologists Dr. Russell Swerdlow and Dr. Jeffrey Burns had never seen a case like this.

The man had an egg-sized brain tumor pressing on the right frontal lobe. When surgeons removed it, the lewd behavior and pedophilia faded away. Exactly why, the surgeons cannot quite explain.

"It's possible the tumor released some pre-existing urges," Burns said. "But that's a tough debate, we just don't know."

The outcome raises questions not only about how tumors alter brain function, but also how they can influence behavior and judgment.

Daniel T. Tranel, a University of Iowa neurology researcher, said he has seen people with brain tumors lie, damage property, and in extremely rare cases, commit murder.

"The individual simply loses the ability to control impulses or anticipate the consequences of choices," Tranel said.

Dr. Stuart C. Yudofsky, a psychiatrist at the Baylor College of Medicine who specializes in behavioral changes associated with brain disorders, also has seen the way brain tumors can bend a person's behavior.

"This tells us something about being human, doesn't it?" Yudofsky said. If one's actions are governed by how well the brain is working, "does it mean we have less free will than we think?"

It's a question with vast implications in the criminal justice system.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that executing mentally retarded murderers is unconstitutionally cruel because of their diminished ability to reason and control their urges.

Chris Adams, a death penalty specialist for the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, thinks the next logical step would be to include people who have brain tumors.

"Some people simply don't have the frontal lobe capacity to stop what they're doing," he said.

Human behavior is governed by complex interactions within the brain. But scientists think most "executive functions" — decisions with major consequences — are controlled within the frontal lobes, the most highly evolved section of the brain.

Tumors in that area can squeeze enough blood from the region to effectively put it to sleep, dulling someone's judgment in a way that's similar to drinking too much alcohol.

Only in very rare cases would the tumor turn the person to violence or deviant behavior on its own, Tranel said.

Dr. Patrick J. Kelly, chairman of the Department of Neurosurgery at New York University Medical Center, said he's never seen a tumor turn someone into a pedophile.

"I've seen them make people hyperactive, forgetful, apathetic," Kelly said. "And it usually takes a fairly extensive tumor to do that ... the size of an orange maybe."

The Virginia schoolteacher with the tumor didn't respond to written interview requests by The Associated Press made through his doctors. But according to his case report, which Swerdlow and Burns wrote in the Archives of Neurology, the man didn't remember having abnormal sexual urges for most of his life.

In 2000, the man began collecting sex magazines and visiting pornographic Web sites, focusing much of his attention on images of children and adolescents.

Eventually he couldn't stop himself, telling doctors "the pleasure principle overrode" everything else. When he started making subtle advances on his young stepdaughter, his wife called police. He was arrested for child molestation.

The man was convicted and failed a 12-step rehabilitation program for sexual addiction because he couldn't stop asking for sex favors, according to the case report.

The day before he was to be sentenced to prison, the man walked into the emergency room with a headache. He was distraught, Swerdlow said, and was contemplating suicide.

He also was "totally unable to control his impulses," Burns said. "He'd proposition nurses."

An MRI revealed the tumor, and it was cut out days later. The man's behavior began to improve. Swerdlow said the judge allowed him to complete a Sexaholics Anonymous program. The man eventually moved back home with his wife and stepdaughter.

About a year later, Swerdlow said, the tumor partially grew back and the man started to collect pornography again. He had another operation last year, and his urges again subsided.

"That's one of the interesting things about frontal lobe damage," Swerdlow said. "This guy, he knew what he was doing was wrong, but he thought there wasn't anything wrong with him, and he didn't stop."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: braintumor; impulsiveness; paraphilias; pedophile; selfrestraint; sexcrime; uva
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To: goldstategop
There is a signifcant difference between a sociopath and a person with executive function damage.
41 posted on 07/28/2003 9:08:07 AM PDT by mlmr (Support bears naked.)
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To: Pharmboy
I've been saying for years that the best cure for pedophiles and sexual offenders is a lobotomy!
42 posted on 07/28/2003 9:08:12 AM PDT by Ippolita (Si vis pacem para bellum)
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To: Pharmboy
Sure...

...My salvo: More evidence that sexual deviancy is indeed a dysfunction within the individual expressing it.
43 posted on 07/28/2003 9:12:34 AM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: DainBramage
thought of your screen name
44 posted on 07/28/2003 9:21:47 AM PDT by Revelation 911
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To: King Prout
A more precise statement: The discovery of every disease began with the recognition of the significance of a single case.
45 posted on 07/28/2003 9:47:52 AM PDT by Savage Beast (Vote Democrat! Vote for national--and personal--suicide! It's like being a suicide bomber!)
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To: CholeraJoe
Nice. I never heard that one before.
46 posted on 07/28/2003 10:34:31 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to...)
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To: corkoman
Now give ol' Tom Waits credit for that one...
47 posted on 07/28/2003 10:37:14 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to...)
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To: Revelation 911
LOL thanks alot. I'll try to remember and think of yours on an article about perverts.
48 posted on 07/28/2003 2:26:19 PM PDT by DainBramage
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To: Lunatic Fringe
I have a friend who is perfectly normal when she takes her medication, but becomes completely irrational, paranoid, and depressed if she forgets.

Quit talkin' about me, dammit! Bugs, bugs all over me! Who's that outside my window? ;)
49 posted on 07/28/2003 2:28:15 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: CholeraJoe
That's "Quote of the Day" material!
50 posted on 07/28/2003 2:34:29 PM PDT by Redcloak (All work and no FReep makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no FReep make s Jack a dul boy. Allwork an)
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To: Pharmboy
The bad news is that the patient hit on his surgeons during their a.m. rounds the next day..... 8~|
51 posted on 07/28/2003 2:38:02 PM PDT by tracer (/b>)
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten; goldstategop; CholeraJoe; harpseal; King Prout; Savage Beast; joesnuffy; ...
Huge danger in generalizing this case to the whole universe of sex criminals. One swallow does not make a summer (absolutely no pun intended).

There is a theory that frontal lobe trauma does factor into most instances of impulsive violent crime. (I'm not an expert so I have no idea.) Here's an excerpt from a long, but fascinating, article:

[Serial killer] Arthur Shawcross, who had a cyst pressing on one temporal lobe and scarring in both frontal lobes (probably from, among other things, being hit on the head with a sledgehammer and with a discus, and falling on his head from the top of a forty-foot ladder), used to walk in absolutely straight lines, splashing through puddles instead of walking around them, and he would tear his pants on a barbed-wire fence instead of using a gate a few feet away. That's the kind of behavior Pincus tries to correlate with abnormalities on the neurological examination. "In the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the psychologist shows the subject four playing cards-three red ones, one black one- and asks which doesn't fit," Pincus said. "Then he shows the subject, say, the four of diamonds, the four of clubs, the four of hearts, and the three of diamonds. Somebody with frontal-lobe damage who correctly picked out the black one the first time-say, the four of clubs- is going to pick the four of clubs the second time. But the rules have changed. It's now a three we're after. We're going by numbers now, not color. It's that kind of change that people with frontal-lobe damage can't make. They can't change the rules. They get stuck in a pattern. They keep using rules that are demonstrably wrong. Then there's the word-fluency test. I ask them to name in one minute as many different words as they can think of which begin with the letter 'f.' Normal is fourteen, plus or minus five. Anyone who names fewer than nine is abnormal."

This is not an intelligence test. People with frontal-lobe damage might do just as well as anyone else if they were asked, say, to list the products they might buy in a supermarket. "Under those rules, most people can think of at least sixteen products in a minute and rattle them off," Pincus said. But that's a structured test, involving familiar objects, and it's a test with rules. The thing that people with frontal-lobe damage can't do is cope with situations where there are no rules, where they have to improvise, where they need to make unfamiliar associations. "Very often, they get stuck on one word- they'll say 'four,' 'fourteen,' 'forty-four,' " Pincus said. "They'll use the same word again and again-'farm' and then 'farming.' Or, as one fellow in a prison once said to me, 'fuck,' 'fucker,' 'fucking.' They don't have the ability to come up with something else."

What's at stake, fundamentally, with frontal-lobe damage is the question of inhibition. A normal person is able to ignore the tapping after one or two taps, the same way he can ignore being jostled in a crowded bar. A normal person can screen out and dismiss irrelevant aspects of the environment. But if you can't ignore the tapping, if you can't screen out every environmental annoyance and stimulus, then you probably can't ignore being jostled in a bar, either. It's living life with a hair trigger.

A recent study of two hundred and seventy-nine veterans who suffered penetrating head injuries in Vietnam showed that those with frontal-lobe damage were anywhere from two to six times as violent and aggressive as veterans who had not suffered such injuries. This kind of aggression is what is known as neurological, or organic, rage. Unlike normal anger, it's not calibrated by the magnitude of the original insult. It's explosive and uncontrollable, the anger of someone who no longer has the mental equipment to moderate primal feelings of fear and aggression.

"There is a reactivity to it, in which a modest amount of stimulation results in a severe overreaction," Stuart Yudofsky told me. "Notice that reactivity implies that, for the most part, this behavior is not premeditated. The person is rarely violent and frightening all the time. There are often brief episodes of violence punctuating stretches when the person does not behave violently at all. There is also not any gain associated with organic violence. The person isn't using the violence to manipulate someone else or get something for himself. The act of violence does just the opposite. It is usually something that causes loss for the individual. He feels that it is out of his control and unlike himself. He doesn't blame other people for it. He often says, 'I hate myself for acting this way.' The first person with organic aggression I ever treated was a man who had been inflating a truck tire when the tire literally exploded and the rim was driven into his prefrontal cortex. He became extraordinarily aggressive. It was totally uncharacteristic: he had been a religious person with strong values. But now he would not only be physically violent-he would curse. When he came to our unit, a nurse offered him some orange juice. He was calm at that moment. But then he realized that the orange juice was warm, and in one quick motion he threw it back at her, knocking her glasses off and injuring her cornea. When we asked him why, he said, 'The orange juice was warm.' But he also said, 'I don't know what got into me.' It wasn't premeditated. It was something that accelerated quickly. He went from zero to a hundred in a millisecond." At that point, I asked Yudofsky an obvious question. Suppose you had a person from a difficult and disadvantaged background, who had spent much of his life on the football field, getting his head pounded by the helmets of opposing players. Suppose he was involved in a tempestuous on-again, off-again relationship with his ex-wife. Could a vicious attack on her and another man fall into the category of neurological rage? "You're not the first person to ask that question," Yudofsky replied dryly, declining to comment further.

Pincus has found that when he examines murderers neurological problems of this kind come up with a frequency far above what would be expected in the general population. For example, Lewis and Pincus published a study of fifteen death-row inmates randomly referred to them for examination; they were able to verify forty-eight separate incidents of significant head injury. Here are the injuries suffered by just the first three murderers examined:

I. three years: beaten almost to death by father (multiple facial
scars) 
early childhood: thrown into sink onto head (palpable scar)
late adolescence: one episode of loss of consciousness while boxing

II. childhood: beaten in head with two-by-fours by parents
childhood: fell into pit, unconscious for several hours
seventeen years: car accident with injury to right eye
eighteen years: fell from roof apparently because of a blackout

III. six years: glass bottle deliberately dropped onto head from tree
(palpable scar on top of cranium)
eight years: hit by car
nine years: fell from platform, received head injury
fourteen years: jumped from moving car, hit head.

52 posted on 07/28/2003 10:48:26 PM PDT by jennyp (http://crevo.bestmessageboard.com)
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To: jennyp
Oops, the first line should've been italicized (I was quoting TKTB4Gotten).
53 posted on 07/28/2003 10:49:32 PM PDT by jennyp (http://crevo.bestmessageboard.com)
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To: jennyp
bump to read when not so sleep-deprived.

AWESOME discussion, folks.
54 posted on 07/29/2003 12:10:37 AM PDT by ChemistCat (Transformers look just as good by morning light as they did the night before.)
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To: jennyp
"It's that kind of change that people with frontal-lobe damage can't make. They can't change the rules. They get stuck in a pattern. They keep using rules that are demonstrably wrong."
Maybe that's what's wrong with "Liberals" (or, in Europe, "left wing radicals"--thank you, austinTparty).

A frontal lobe lesion would also explain why so many of them are sociopathic.

"Then there's the word-fluency test. I ask them to name in one minute as many different words as they can think of which begin with the letter 'f.' Normal is fourteen, plus or minus five. Anyone who names fewer than nine is abnormal."
"Liberals" usually know only one word that begins with an "f". (Notice that "freedom" is not in their vocabulary.)
55 posted on 07/29/2003 5:05:00 AM PDT by Savage Beast (Vote Democrat! Vote for national--and personal--suicide! It's like being a suicide bomber!)
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To: jennyp
I would never jump to conclusions here. Head trauma is corrolated with criminality and mental illness. Impulsivity is one of the hallmarks of both. Not all pedophiles are impulsive.
56 posted on 07/29/2003 8:33:34 AM PDT by mlmr (Support bears naked.)
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To: Pharmboy; CholeraJoe
A friend and I were recently having a discussion about how difficult it is to not look at an attractive woman when you're having a conversation with another woman you're trying to impress.

You tell yourself, "dont' look, don't look," however - if you don't look, your mind goes blank and you can't follow the conversation - if you do look; you seem like a cad; and if she really is that attractive - your mind still goes blank anway (or your mind turns to other pursuits.)

There have been times when my brain consciously orders myself to not look - but I look anyway. I'm sure other males here will be able to relate....

I guess the point I'm trying to make is that I can begin to understand how the brain can tell your body to do one thing, and it doesn't always obey.

A woman friend recently told me that god gave men 2 heads, and only enough blood to make one work at a time. Now there's a quote of the day for you....
57 posted on 07/29/2003 8:39:40 AM PDT by M. Peach (eschew obsfucation)
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To: jennyp
Isn't there an old folk-saying, "What's the matter with him? Did he get dropped too many times on his head when he was little?"

I guess there may be some wisdom in that saying and that is a folksy way of summarizing what you are saying.

Certainly these cases are a hodge-podge and sexual deviancy is not all one thing or all another.

I guess one analogy might be hypertension. If you have 1000 people with hypertension you might find 1 person that has an adrenal tumor, one person that has a coarctation of the aorta and one person that has some sort of renal disease (I am completely making these numbers up but the magnitudes are about right). The fact remains, however, that the other 997 will have "idiopathic hypertension" which means "The BP is high and we don't know why".

Incidently the same numbers apply to people with headaches.
Every now and then someone with headaches turns out to have a brain tumor. But it is a very, very, very rare cause. The most common cause of headaches is just tension headaches, sinus headaches and migraines.

I think we have a similar situation here. There is probably odd cases of organic lesions that cause sexual deviancy but much more commonly there is no organic cause.

Just my $.02. Interesting discussion.
58 posted on 07/29/2003 9:06:55 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: goldstategop
If its a physical condition, the determination about one's moral capacity is easy enough to make. The real controversy is over a mental condition and that's where it gets controversial.

Well in neurology the distinction between a mental and physical state is becoming ever more blurred as we find out more about genetics and brain structure and environmental interactions between the two.

59 posted on 07/29/2003 8:33:12 PM PDT by garbanzo (Free people will set the course of history)
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