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About OCD

About Obsessions

 

Obsessions are unwelcome and distressing ideas, thoughts, images, or impulses that repeatedly enter your mind. They may seem to occur against your will. They may be repugnant to you, you may recognize them as senseless or excessive, and they may not fit your personality.

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  • Recurrent thoughts, images, or impulses experienced as intrusive and inappropriate, causing marked anxiety or distress

  • Not simply excessive worries about real life problems

  • Accompanied by efforts to ignore, suppress, or neutralize thoughts

  • Recognized as the product of one's own mind

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Common Obsessions

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  • Contamination: Dirt, germs, bodily waste, chemicals

  • Mistakes: Locks, appliances, paperwork, decisions

  • Impulses: Violent, sexual, religious, embarrassing

  • Order: Neatness, symmetry, numbers

 

Incidence of Obsessions by Percentage

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  • Contamination: 32.9%

  • Aggression: 16.6%

  • Need for Exactness: 8.5%

  • Religious: 6.3%

  • Somatic: 6.2%

  • Sexual: 5.3%

  • Hoarding/Saving: 4.0%

  • Miscellaneous: 20.2%

 

About Compulsions

 

Compulsions, on the other hand, are behaviors or acts that you feel driven to perform although you may recognize them as senseless or excessive. At times you may try to resist doing them but this may prove difficult. You may experience anxiety that does not diminish until the behavior is completed.

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  • Repetitive behaviors and mental acts that the person feels driven to perform in response to an obsession or according to rigid rules

  • Aimed at preventing or reducing distress or preventing some dreaded event or situation clearly excessive or not realistically connected to the obsessive fear

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Common Compulsions

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  • Checking

  • Washing and Cleaning

  • Repetition of Normal Activities

  • Ordering or Arranging

  • Saving or Collecting

  • Mental Compulsions

  • Special words, images, and numbers recreated mentally to reduce anxiety

  • Repetition of special prayers

  • Mental counting

  • Mental list making

  • Mental reviewing

 

Incidence of Compulsions by Percentage

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  • Checking: 28.1%

  • Cleaning/Washing: 25.9%

  • Mental: 11.5%

  • Repeating: 11.0%

  • Ordering/Arranging: 5.3%

  • Hoarding/Collecting: 3.2%

  • Counting: 2.6%

  • Miscellaneous: 12.4%


Diagnostic Criteria for OCD

 

  • At some point the person has recognized that behaviors are excessive or unrealistic

  • Obsessions and compulsions cause distress, are time consuming, and significantly interfere with functioning

  • The content of obsessions and compulsions cannot be accounted for by another disorder

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PET scans indicate differences in brain activity of OCD patients versus normals


Epidemiology

 

  • OCD has a one-month prevalence of 1.3%

  • OCD has a lifetime prevalence of 2.5%

  • Four millions adult Americans have OCD

 

Factors contributing to underestimation of OCD prevalence

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  • Patients resist disclosing 'crazy' symptoms

  • Failure to screen for OCD during MSE

  • Difficulties in differential diagnosis​​

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Obsession-Compulsion Relation


Compulsions may fall into any of the following categories:

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  • Are intended to prevent harm

  • Have nothing to do with harm, they just reduce discomfort

  • Are done automatically without purpose

  • Relationship between obsessions and compulsions is unclear


OCD is Reinforced by Learning

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  • Obsessions give rise to anxiety or distress

  • Compulsions reduce obsessional anxiety

  • Performance of compulsions prevents the extinction of obsessional anxiety

  • Compulsions are negatively reinforced by the brief reduction in anxiety they engender


The OCD Cycle


 

 

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Obsessions cause anxiety, causing the sufferer to engage in compulsions in an attempt to alleviate the distress caused by the obsessions. Carrying out these compulsions, or rituals, does not result in any permanent change, and in fact, the OC symptoms worsen.


Comorbid Conditions


Incidence of Comorbid Conditions

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  • Depression: 30%

  • Simple Phobia: 30%

  • Social Phobia: 20%

  • Panic Disorder: 15%

  • Tourette's Syndrome: 36-52%

  • Sleep Disorder: 40%

  • Eating Disorders: 10%

  • Bulimia: 33%


Effective Treatments for OCD

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  • Drug Therapies

  • Behavioral Therapy

  • Medication with Behavioral Therapy

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PET scans of OCD patients show the same reductions in brain caudate nucleus activity (center of brain) that occur following successful drug treatment are also produced by successful behavior therapy.

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© 2018 Westwood Institute for Anxiety Disorders

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Contact Us

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Los Angeles, CA 90024

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310-443-0031

Westwood Institute for Anxiety Disorders

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