Case Report
Glob J Add & Rehab Med
Volume 3 Issue 1 - August 2017
DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607
Copyright © All rights are reserved by Suprakash Chaudhury
Cyber Sexual Addiction: Two Case Reports
Suprakash Chaudhury*1, Spandana Devabhaktuni1, Gagandeep Singh1, Chandra Kiran2, Dolly Kumari2 and
Neelam Kumari2
1
Department of Psychiatry, Dr. DY Patil Medical College, India
2
Department of Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology, Ranchi Institute of Neuropsychiatry & Allied Sciences (RINPAS), India
Submission: August 10, 2017; Published: August 18, 2017
*Corresponding author: Suprakash Chaudhury, Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry, Dr. D Y Patil Medical College, Pune, Maharashtra, India,
Email:
Abstract
Cyber Sexual addiction disorders are becoming quite widespread these days due to the ease of access, low cost and instant gratification. The
prevalence rates are quite staggering and involve age groups from 10yrs to 60yrs. These problems also bother the family members especially the
spouse or the parents, so systematic and stringent methods should be adopted for the management of these problems. We present two cases of
Cyber Sexual addiction and discuss the condition and its treatment.
Keywords: Internet addiction; Cybersex addiction; Cognitive behaviour therapy
Introduction
We are witnessing the growth of a faster paced, technologybased world where there is less need for face-to-face interaction
to conduct personal and commercial business. Recognized
since the mid-1990s, Internet addiction exhibits signs and
symptoms similar to those of other established addictions [12]. It is uncontrollable and damaging use of the Internet and is
recognized as a compulsive-impulsive Internet usage disorder,
one of those in the spectrum of impulse-control disorders
discussed in recent psychiatric literature [3-4]. Though the
basic epidemiology of the disorder remains unclear, studies
in different countries suggest that the population prevalence
of Internet addiction ranges from 0.3% in the United States,
0.8% in Italy and 1.0% in Norway to 26.7% in Hong Kong [57]. Among adolescents, the prevalence is about 8% in Greece
[8]. A growing incidence in adolescence has been reported by
researchers in Taiwan and China from about 6% in 2000 to
about 11% in 2009 [9-10]. While studies indicate that people
suffering from Internet addiction are mostly young males
with introverted personality, it has also been shown that the
prevalence of the disorder among females is increasing [11]. An
association between internet addiction, psychiatric symptoms,
and depression among adolescents has been reported [12-14].
Internet addiction is also detrimental to physical health research
on patients who were addicted to the Internet, particularly to the
massively multiplayer online role-playing games, demonstrated
that these games induced seizures in 10 patients [15].
Glob J Add & Rehab Med 3(2): GJARM.MS.ID.555607 (2017)
A study on sexuality and the Internet showed that
approximately 9 million people, or 15% of Internet users,
accessed one of the many top adult web sites in a 1-month period
[16]. Three primary factors that promote online compulsive
sexual behavior, which have been referred to as the triple-A
engine, include easy accessibility, affordability, and anonymity
[17]. Online sexual behaviors fall in a range, from normal, or
even life-enhancing, to pathological. Individuals with empty
and unsatisfying lies continue to use internet to act out their
issues through pornography, sex with multiple and anonymous
partners, phone sex, and paraphilias. These people find the quick
boost produced by the mood-altering experience the computer
can provide very enjoyable, and thereby repeat the experience
time and again [18]. However, viewing pornography on the
Internet can lead to psychological problems which is obvious
from the fact that 17% met criteria for problematic sexual
compulsivity in one study [17].
Sexual behaviors trigger brain dopamine secretion, which
becomes supra-natural at intense levels, such as with frequent
use of pornography. In addition endogenous opioid systems is
also involved. This mirrors the effects of addictive substances,
[19-20] and may explain the addiction potential of sex [21].
A qualitative study of individuals who use the Internet for
sexual activity indicated that they experience difficulties
with depression, low self-esteem, social isolation, damaged
0030
Global Journal of Addiction & Rehabilitation Medicine
relationships, career loss or decreased productivity, and financial
consequences as a result of their behaviours [22].
The American Center for Online Addiction has identified
five types of Internet Addictions including Computer addiction,
Information overload addiction, Net gaming addiction, Social
network addiction cyber relationship addiction and Cyber
sexual addiction [23]. It is also postulated that Cyber sexual
addiction is not merely be a sub-type of Internet addiction, but
also a subtype of sex addiction [24]. There is no diagnosis of
pornography addiction in the current Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (DSM 5) [25], and as with the
broader proposed diagnosis of sexual addiction, there is debate
as to whether or not the behaviours indicate a behavioural
addiction. Two cases of Cybersex addiction with obsessive
compulsive disorder and depression are presented and their
treatment discussed.
Case Reports
Case 1
A 22 years old unmarried, Hindu, male reported to the
outpatients department with the complaints of poor repeated
thoughts regarding masturbation, excessive thinking regarding
sex desire, and poor concentration of 8 years duration. History
revealed that in class 8th when he was about 13 years old he
learnt about sex from friends and used to fondle his genitalia
while reading books or pictures about sex. This gradually
increased and he began watching blue films and surfing internet
porn sites. He would spend 6-8 hours in these activities and used
to masturbate 6-8 times a day. At the same time he had excessive
guilt about his masturbation but could not stop the practice.
He started feeling weak, his concentration was affected and
his school performance declined and he dropped out from his
studies.
There was no history of paraphilia or psychosis. There was
history of a solitary seizure about a year back. CT scan of head
had revealed a calcified Nodule in right parietal region adjacent
to falx. He had been treated by neurologist for the same and there
was no recurrence of symptoms. Mental Status Examination
showed a kempt and cooperative individual who was in touch
with surroundings and maintained eye to eye contact. Rapport
was easily established. His voice was audible and clear with
coherent, relevant and goal directed speech. Affect was anxious
and mildly depressed. There was no perceptual abnormality.
Memory, orientation and insight were unimpaired.
On Padua Inventory the score was 101 suggesting obsessive
and compulsive symptoms. A high score on factor 1 (impaired
control over mental activities) suggest his decreased ability to
control undesirable thoughts, difficulties in coping with simple
decisions and doubts and uncertainty about ones responsibility
in occasional accidents. Whereas high score on factor 3 (checking
0031
behaviour) suggests he is having a compulsion to check doors,
gas, water, letters, money again and again.
On the BDI a total score of 26 suggests mild level of depressive
symptoms in the patient. Features suggest somatic preoccupation,
sense of failure, self hate, self accusations, indecisiveness, body
image, work inhibition, fatigability and weight loss. YBOCS
analysis showed presence of contamination, sexual obsession,
and miscellaneous obsession, somatic obsession, cleaning and
washing compulsions, checking compulsions. Time occupied by
obsessive thoughts is moderate and he feels free from them for
nearly 3 to 8 hours a day. He tries to resist these thoughts and on
some occasions is able to control them. He spends more time in
compulsive behaviour and has extreme distress due to these and
thus he tries to resists it. He has insight into his problems but
due to his obsessions he avoids doing things, going to places and
faces difficulties in making decisions. Overall he is having severe
level of obsession and compulsions.
Total number of responses on Rorschach Psycho diagnostics
was 31 which suggest that he pays proper attention to the
surroundings. Initial reaction time was within average range
(24.3 sec) indicating average speed of mental processing. ‘Dd’
dominated approach suggests a tendency to give overemphasis on
minor details. F+% were high (79%) indicating adequate reality
contact. High ‘M’ (8) responses shows impulsivity in the patient,
‘Y’ responses (2) reveal depressive emotion while ‘V’ responses
indicate inferiority complex in him. High ‘Hd’ responses (8)
indicate fragmented body image. High ‘An’ responses suggest
somatic preoccupation and Afr suggest constricted emotionality.
EB ratio indicates intratensive trend of personality. Low ‘P’ (2)
responses reveal poor social conformity.
He was treated with Fluoxetine 60 mg. daily. Motivational
interviewing was conducted to assess and help overcome any
resistance to treatment. Therapist asked what patient knew
about his disorder and its treatment and then suggested that
CBT consisting of exposure and response prevention targeting
his checking compulsions was recommended and explained
what this would involve. Initially the thought of facing his
avoidance and distress head on sounded really challenging to
the patient. He was informed that his anxiety level may increase
initially during exposure sessions and that this anxiety and the
time they must expend are the short-term costs of behavioral
therapy. Therapist’s role would be to guide him to do this in a
graded way, at a pace that felt manageable. Therapist explained
to the patient how carrying out his compulsive checking and
washing activities was reducing his distress in the short term
and giving him some initial relief, but in the longer term it was
keeping his difficulties going.
Patient was given a description as to how ERP breaks this
vicious cycle by gradually exposing him to the things that he is
avoiding and that trigger his obsessions, whilst he resists the urge
How to cite this article: Suprakash C, Spandana D, Gagandeep S, Chandra K, Dolly K. Cyber Sexual Addiction: Two Case Reports. Glob J Add & Rehab
Med. 2017; 3(2): 555607. DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607.
Global Journal of Addiction & Rehabilitation Medicine
to carry out the compulsive activity. Remaining in the exercise
without carrying out the compulsion means that his distress/
anxiety reduces naturally. As his anxiety or distress naturally
reduces, the strength between your obsession and compulsion
also reduces. Client felt relieved that there was something that
may be able to help him, even if it was a daunting prospect. With
the therapist, he then set his goals for moving forwards with
the treatment. The patient was given 20 sessions of CBT over
a period of 4 months of 45-60 minutes each. The first step was
for him to record the details of when he had intrusive thoughts
or images and the compulsive activities he carried out and how
long he did these for. Therapist explained that doing this would
enable them to be clearer about what to put on his hierarchy,
how much things were currently affecting him and it would also
give them a baseline to measure progress against.
Client met with the therapist again the following week and
together they reviewed his list of compulsions also including the
websites client feels compelled to surf and the amount of time
spent on them. Client was encouraged to talk about things that
triggered his compulsions and the things he avoided as a result.
From this they moved on to plan his hierarchy of compulsion.
With the help of the therapist client listed out his compulsions
from the most difficult to the easiest graded on the distress
induced by the compulsions and not the time spent on them.
found that he was able to tolerate the distress that only checking
twice gave him more easily as the week went on and towards
the end of her week he was ok about doing it and it didn’t cause
him much anxiety at all. Encouraged by the previous weeks
progress client went on to pick another moderately distressing
compulsion to carry on in the next week. As the client made
progress week after week he felt his anxiety regarding making
decisions and communication with others had improved. The
most distress inducing compulsion for the client was surfing
porn sites when he was at work which led to missing important
deadlines at work and he noticed that he tried to resist this the
most which led to severe anxious states. After complying with
this compulsion he reported feeling guilty and ashamed of his
work ethic. He had repetitive thoughts of his colleagues finding
out and spent considerable time checking if he had deleted the
website history.
A particular pornographic site, a certain time of day or a
client’s mood just before watching may all serve as triggers
that can lead to inappropriate conduct and abuse. Client was
encouraged to maintain a daily content log to keep track of when
and how they watch.When client tried to resist the compulsion to
watch porn at work for the first time, it was really difficult. Client
predicted anxiety had been 75%, but when he was preparing for
another work he would get more and more anxious.
Another Worksheet was prepared to plan to carry out ERP
exercises that he would do over the next week. Client was asked
to choose to carry out a compulsion that caused moderate
distress as starting with the most distressing would discourage
the client if the anxiety was too daunting to finish the exercise.
Client chose ‘Leave for work having only checked the gas stove
twice’ as it was moderately distressing that is it induced around
60% distress. He went through the conditions of ERP to ensure
that the exercises are conducted properly. He would check all the
doors, windows and money as usual except the gas stove, which
he would only check twice, and then leave. He would remain
out of the house long enough for his distress to drop by 50%
and then write the duration after this had happened. He rated
his distress before exercise level, which was 60%, and then he
carried out his compulsions as usual but stopped to check the
gas stove only twice. He felt the urge rise to check again when
he was about to leave the house and his distress level rose at the
start of the exercise to 75%. Initially his level of distress didn’t
feel like it was coming down, but slowly it did start to reduce. It
wasn’t easy and he found the urge to go back and check remained
strong for quite some time, but then eventually it came down
and then he was asked to note the time it took for the distress to
decrease by half.
He recorded his anxiety to be about 90% at the start of
the exercise and he found it really difficult to concentrate on
other work having not checked the online sites. After about
ten minutes he felt he could not tolerate it any longer and went
online. He was really disappointed but remembered that if
this could happen and he had to try harder next time. Initially
he tried not to recheck if he deleted his browsing history or
not which was easier than not surfing porn at all. He went for
a walk in the office until his anxiety had dropped to 40% and
then went back to his cabin. He felt exhausted, but pleased he
had carried on. The next day it got a bit easier and so he kept
going with it. Once it was easier for him to stop himself from
checking his browsing history he went on to cut the amount of
time he spent on browsing and later on over a couple of weeks
he was able to completely cease his compulsion to watch porn in
the office. Though client watches it occasionally at home he now
feels that the guilt associated with it previously was no more and
he could move on to other activities. As the client’s social and
family life was suffering because of his addiction and subsequent
compulsions he was encouraged to make regular plans with
them and client noticed that as his anxiety and compulsions
came down he was able to concentrate and build better relations
with them.
He was really pleased with what had happened and so he
repeated it again as planned on his homework sheet. He noticed
that although still difficult, he felt more able to manage it as he
had managed it once before. He carried on for the week and
In the next few sessions focus of the therapeutic session
was on the cognitive restructuring of the client. Cognitive
restructuring involves systematic identification of the
problematic thought patterns which contribute to onset and
0032
How to cite this article: Suprakash C, Spandana D, Gagandeep S, Chandra K, Dolly K. Cyber Sexual Addiction: Two Case Reports. Glob J Add & Rehab
Med. 2017; 3(2): 555607. DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607.
Global Journal of Addiction & Rehabilitation Medicine
maintenance of the symptoms. Using cognitive restructuring
with client will help him reevaluate how rational and valid these
interpretations are. Over time, challenging this type of negative
cognitions helped the client realize that real life can offer many
of the things that the addiction does. Once client became aware
of his patterns of faulty thinking, he began to challenge these
thoughts more independently of therapy. In this way, he found
it more difficult to rationalize or justify his addictive behaviour.
On review after six months he was maintaining improvement on
medications.
Case 2
A 28 year old male married for 4 years came to the
outpatient department along with his parents with the history
of preoccupation with internet pornography and disinterest in
sex of 2 years duration. His wife had gone to her parental home
in the seventh month of pregnancy and now refused to return as
she felt neglected due to her husband’s habit of watching porn
on the net. She was willing to return if he took treatment for the
same. History revealed that he first watched pornography at the
age of 15 years with his friends. Initially he would watch internet
porn infrequently but gradually it became a nightly habit and
was followed by masturbation. The time spent watching porn
also increased to achieve his desired level of pleasure. Due to
his habit he was warned at his place of work after which he
stopped carrying his mobile phone to work. However every
night he would watch internet porn for 3-4 hours. If he was
unable to watch or his time was cut short he developed distress
and became irritable.
First few months of marriage he had sex every day and more
often on holidays. During this period he had almost stopped
watching internet porn. After 8 months of marriage his wife
got pregnant and they could not indulge in sex as often as
earlier. Gradually he resumed his habit of daily visiting internet
porn sites and masturbation which was observed by his wife
and the patient had confessed his problem to his wife. Mental
Status Examination showed a kempt and cooperative individual
who was in touch with surroundings and rapport was easily
established. He spoke in low tone with normal speed. Speech
was coherent, relevant and goal directed. Affect was anxious and
mildly depressed. There was no perceptual abnormality. Memory,
orientation and insight were unimpaired. On the BDI total score
of 24 suggests mild level of depressive symptoms in the patient.
He was treated with Fluoxetine 40 mg daily and given cognitive
behaviour therapy and over six months he gradually improved
and resumed his marital life.
Discussion
Young [26] proposed a set of criteria for diagnosing Internet
addiction based on the DSM-IV [27] criteria for pathological
gambling. She selected eight of the 10 gambling criteria she felt
applied most readily to Internet use – preoccupation with the
Internet, a need for increased time spent online to achieve the
0033
same amount of satisfaction, repeated efforts to curtail Internet
use, irritability, depression, or mood lability when Internet
use is limited, staying online longer than anticipated, putting a
job or relationship in jeopardy to use Internet, lying to others
about how much time is spent online, and using the Internet as a
means of regulating mood – and determined that those patients
fulfilling five out of the eight criteria would be considered
Internet-dependent. It has been argued that both compulsive
and impulsive use of the internet fulfil the criteria as a disorder
characterized by: excessive internet use along with loss of sense
of time or a neglect of basic drives; tolerance including increasing
hours of use or need for better hardware and software; if unable
to access computer withdrawal symptoms manifest with tension,
anger, and/or depression; and negative consequences including
inter-personal issues leading to social isolation, fatigue and poor
achievement[28].
Cognitive behavioural therapy is the primary therapy at
this time. The goal of this therapy is for clients to disrupt their
problematic computer use, to construct their routines with
other activities, and to keep more moderate levels of Internet
use. Understanding how stress at work or in a marriage can lead
person to use the Internet as a “get away” is the focus of therapy
Getting rid of the favourites on the computer can make it more
difficult to find a favourite Internet site, such as sites that are
impulsively accessed when the user is bored. Personal logs of
feelings, time of day and Internet activity can be kept over time to
determine patterns of Internet use. Clear limits on computer use
should be put in place by other family members. Parents might
need to limit computer use to school work, to ask the young
adult to use the family computer in an open area of the house, or
to confiscate the young adult’s computer until his or her grades
improve. The goal is moderate computer use mixed with ageappropriate social activities, such as involvement in clubs and
sports. Taking routine computer breaks, where a person is not
on a computer for a certain number of hours, or even days, is a
way to disrupt a problematic Internet routine with one that can
eventually wean a person from online addictive behaviour.
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Med. 2017; 3(2): 555607. DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607.
Global Journal of Addiction & Rehabilitation Medicine
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DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607
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How to cite this article: Suprakash C, Spandana D, Gagandeep S, Chandra K, Dolly K. Cyber Sexual Addiction: Two Case Reports. Glob J Add & Rehab
Med. 2017; 3(2): 555607. DOI: 10.19080/GJARM.2017.03.555607.