Chapter 6: Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
5 Most Common Compulsions
1. Cleaning (hand washing and showering) 2. Repeated Checking 3. Repeating 4. Ordering or arranging 5. Counting
Criteria for OCD Compulsions
1. Repetitive behaviors or mental acts that the individual feels driven to perform in response to an obsession or according to rules that must be rigidly applied 2. The behaviors or mental acts are aimed at preventing or reducing anxiety or distress or preventing dreaded situation but are not connected in realistic way or are clearly excessive B. Must be time consuming at least 1 hour a day
Prevalence, Age of Onset, and Gender Differences
2.3 % Lifetime prevalence Occurs late adolescence/ early adulthood Onset is more common in boys than girls and in greater severity F=M
Comorbidty
25 to 50% of people with OCD have depression
Criteria OCD Obsessions
A. Presence of obsession, compulsions, or both Obsessions are defined by: 1. Recurrent and persistent thoughts, urges, or images and are intrusive and unwanted with marked anxiety and distress 2. Attempts to ignore or suppress such thoughts, urges, or images, or to neutralize them with some other thought or action
Compulsions
Can involve either overt repetitive behaviors that are performed as lengthy rituals (such as hand washing, checking, putting things in order over and over) or mental rituals like praying or saying a word over and over performed with the goal or preventing or reducing distress or preventing some dreaded event or situaion
OCD
Defined by the occurrence of unwanted and intrusive obsessive thoughts or distressing images accompanied by compulsive behavior to neutralize obsessive thoughts
Treatment
Exposure and response prevention Gamma knife Medication
Etiology
Learned behavior -> develop fear --> obsess --> creates anxiety --> compulsion relieves --> reinforce Evolutionary preparedness --> things people obsess about are evolutionarily beneficial Efforts to surpress Inflated Sense of Responsibility Biased attention towards disturbing material Structural abnormalities --> over activation or orbital frontal cortex "leaks" Neurotransmitters --> serotonin
Medications
Medicines that affect serotonin
Genetic Factors
Moderately high concordance rate amongst identical twins
OCD as a Learned Behavior
Neutral stimuli become associated with frightening thoughts or experiences through classical conditioning which come to elicit anxiety Door knob, scary germs, anxiety about germs is reduced by washing which reinforced Hard to extinguish
Exposure and Response Prevention
OCD clients develop hierarchy of upsetting stimuli and then expose themselves repeatedly to stimuli that will provoke obsession and are told to not engage in rituals they would ordinarily do
OCD and Evolution
Overall consensus seems to be that humans's obsessions about dirt and contamination and other dangerous situations arose from evolutionary roots
Obsessions
Persistent and recurrent intrusive thoughts, images, or impulses that are experienced as disturbing, inappropriate, and uncontrollable Most involve contamination, fears of harming oneself or another, and pathological doubt
Cognitive Causal Factors
Surpressing thoughts leads to more general increase in OCD thoughts
OCD and the Brain
The cortico-basal-ganglionic-thalmic circuit is normally involved in the prep of complex sets of interrelated behavioral responses, but when not functioning properly, repeated sets of behavior occur Serotonin strongly implicated in OCD