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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD

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Obsessive-Compulsive

Disorder (OCD)
Dr. Abdullah Alqahtani
Assistant Professor and Consultant Psychiatrist
Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University
Objectives

To understand the concept of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder including :


• Definition,
• Symptomatology,
• Epidemiology,
• Etiology,
• Differential diagnosis, and
• Management including pharmacological, psychological, and surgical.
Introduction
• OCD is represented by a diverse group of symptoms that include intrusive thoughts, rituals,
preoccupations, and compulsions.

• These recurrent obsessions or compulsions cause severe distress to the person.

• The obsessions or compulsions are time-consuming and interfere significantly with the
person’s normal routine, occupational functioning, usual social activities, or relationships.

• A person with OCD may have an obsession, a compulsion, or both.


Introduction
• An obsession is a recurrent and intrusive thought, feeling, idea, or sensation.

• In contrast to an obsession, which is a mental event, a compulsion is a behavior. Specifically, a


compulsion is a conscious, standardized, recurrent behavior, such as counting, checking, or
avoiding.

• A patient with OCD realizes the irrationality of the obsession and experiences both the
obsession and the compulsion as ego-dystonic (i.e., unwanted behavior).

• Anxiety is increased when a person resists carrying out a compulsion.

• Although the compulsive act may be carried out in an attempt to reduce the anxiety associated
with the obsession, it does not always succeed in doing so.
Introduction

• OCD is Recurrent Obsessions, Compulsions leading to


- Distress,
- Time consumption, and
- Socio-Occupational dysfunction

• Obsessions: Recurrent and Intrusive Thoughts , Images or Impulses –which are


- Ego-dystonic, and
- Cause Anxiety or Distress
Introduction
• Compulsions: Repetitive, Driven BEHAVIOR (or mental acts) :
- In response to obsessions
- According to certain rules (rituals)
- Aimed at reducing anxiety
- Recognized as unreasonable, ego- dystonic

• Obsessions increase anxiety and Compulsions decrease it.

• Obsessions and Compulsions occur in:


- Normal
- OCD
- Other psychiatric disorder
Epidemiology
• Lifetime prevalence is 2-3% in the general population.

• 10% in OPD in psychiatric clinics.

• It is the 4th most common psychiatric diagnosis after phobias, substance-related disorders, and
MDD.

• Age of onset : mean= 20-22

• Delay in help seeking ( stigma, ignorance )

• Single > married


Comorbidity
• MDD (67% lifetime prevalence in OCD patients)
• Social Phobia (25%)
• Other Anxiety Disorders (GAD, Specific Phobia, Panic Disorder)
• Alcohol Use Disorders
• Eating Disorders
• Personality Disorders

• Tourette’s Disorder (5-7%)


• History of tics (20-30%)
Etiology

• Neurotransmitters:
- Dysregulation (decreased) serotonin is involved in the symptom formation of OCD.
- Less evidence exists for dysfunction in the noradrenergic system.

• NeuroImmunology:
- There is a positive link between streptococcal infection and OCD.
- Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection can cause rheumatic fever.
- 10-30% of patients develop Sydenham’s chorea and show obsessive-compulsive symptoms
(anti-B.G. anti-bodies).
- Pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections
(PANDAS)
Etiology
• Brain-Imaging Studies:
- Altered function in the neurocircuitry between orbitofrontal cortex, caudate, and thalamus.

- Positron emission tomography (PET) have shown increased activity (metabolism and blood
flow) in the frontal lobes, the basal ganglia (esp. the caudate), and the cingulum of patients
with OCD.

- Pharmacological and behavioral treatments reportedly reverse these abnormalities.

- Both CT and MRI studies have found bilaterally smaller caudates in patients with OCD.

- Both functional and structural brain-imaging study results are compatible with the observation
that neurological procedures involving the cingulum are sometimes effective in the treatment
of OCD.
Etiology
• Genetics:
- 35% of first-degree relatives have OCD or obsessive-compulsive features.
- Abnormal 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) transporter gene.
- Significantly higher concordance rate for monozygotic twins than for dizygotic twins.

• Cognitive-Behavioral Factors:
- Cognitive Errors : Risk over-estimation, perfectionism, and control.
- Learning ( Conditioning ) : compulsions reinforced by reducing anxiety.

• Psycho-dynamic Factors:
- Isolation, un-doing , and reaction formation.
Clinical Picture
• Obsessions: Recurrent and persistent thoughts, impulses, or images:
- experienced as intrusive & inappropriate,
- cause anxiety or distress.
- Patient attempts to resist, ignore, or neutralize (with other thought or act),
- has insight and knows that it is his own (from inside).

• Forms of Obsessions:
- Thought,
- image,
- doubt,
- impulse, or
- rumination.
Clinical Picture

• Compulsions: Repetitive driven behaviors or mental acts:


- performed according to rigid specific rules (ritual), or in response to obsessions
- aim at reducing anxiety or distress or preventing a dreadful unrealistically related event.
- Patient has insight.

• Obsessions + Compulsions = 75 – 100 % of OCD cases


Obsessions alone = 25 %

• In Chronic Cases : distress, resistance and insight are LOST (delusional OCD).
Clinical Picture

Content (Themes) of Obsessions and Compulsions:

1- Contamination/Washing (or contamination/avoidance)


2- Doubt/Checking ( or doubt/repetition )
3- Sexual or Aggressive
4- Religious: ablution, praying, purity, blasphemous
5- Symmetry and Precision/Compulsion of slowness
6- Hoarding
Differential Diagnosis
1- Depression

2- Phobia & GAD.

3- SCZ.

4- Neuro.: tics , trauma , epilepsy , encephalitis

5- OCPD : OCD :
No O or C O&C
No distress Distress
No onset Onset disorder
No resistance Resistance
Course and Prognosis

• Onset: acute or gradual, usually after stressor.

• Delay: ignorance/stigma, up to several years.

• Course: Chronic, continuous or fluctuating.

• Functional disability:
- 20-30% of patients have significant improvement.
- 40-50% have moderate improvement.
- 20-40% remain ill or their symptoms worsen.
Course and Prognosis

• Poor Prognosis is indicated by:


- Yielding to compulsions (rather than resisting)
- Childhood onset
- Bizarre compulsions
- The need for hospitalization
- A coexisting major depressive disorder
- The presence of delusional beliefs or overvalued ideas
- The presence of a personality disorder (esp. schizotypal).
Course and Prognosis

• Good Prognosis is indicated by:


- Good social and occupational adjustment
- The presence of a precipitating event
- An episodic nature of the symptoms.

• The obsessional content does not seem to be related to prognosis.


Treatment
1- Pharmacotherapy: for obsessions.
- SSRI or Clomipramine (Anafranil )
- Augmentation with lithium, valproate, carbamazepine, or risperidone.

2- Psychotherapy:
- Educational,
- Supportive,
- Family
- CBT
- Behavioral Therapy: ERP.(exposure, and response prevention ): for compulsions.
Treatment
3- ECT (Electroconvulsive Therapy):
- For extreme cases that are treatment-resistant and chronically debilitating.
- Should be tried before surgery.

4- Psychosurgery:
- Cingulotomy
- Capsulotomy (Sub-caudate tractotomy)
OCD-Related Disorders
• Body dysmorphic disorder,
• Trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder),
• Hoarding disorder, and
• Excoriation (skin-picking) disorder
References:
• Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry: Behavioral Sciences/clinical Psychiatry, Eleventh
Edition.

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