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Mankind
Quarterly, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Fall 2004)
pp. 35-45
Long-term Behavioral Effects
of Injury at Infancy: The Case against Circumcision.
Aldric Hama
Experimental evidence has shown that acute
injury in adult animals leads to pain that persists well beyond
the period of healing. The underlying mechanism of this persistent
pain, lasting weeks or months, is a maladaptive change in the
processing of sensory information induced by injury. Thus, subsequent
stimuli are abnormally perceived and behavioral responses are
highly exaggerated. A similar process occurs in the neonatal
animal, which has a functional sensory system and is extremely
sensitive to cutaneous stimulation. Superimposing an injury
on a neonate will lead to a state of persistent hypersensitivity.
Neonatal circumcision may lead to long-lasting alteration of
sensory perception and possibly other behavioral disturbances.
The risk of long-term changes in behavior outweighs the perceived
benefits of circumcision.
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