OCD

Cards (53)

  • What does OCD stand for?
    Obsessive compulsive disorder
  • What is OCD?
    Chronic long lasting disorder characterised by uncontrollable reoccurring thoughts and/or behaviours that they feel the urge to repeat over and over
  • DSM-5 categories of OCD
    • Trichotillomania
    • Hoarding Disorder
    • Excoriation Disorder
  • What is trichotillomania?

    • A compulsive hair-pulling disorder
    • May pull out the hair on her head or in other places such as eyebrows and eyelashes
  • What is hoarding disorder?
    The compulsive gathering of possessions and the inability to part with anything, regardless of its value
  • Excoriation disorder?
    • A compulsive skin-picking disorder which leads to areas of swollen or broken skin
    • Also called dermatillomania
  • 3 categories of characteristics of OCD
    • Emotional
    • Behavioural
    • Cognitive
  • Behavioural characteristics of OCD
    • Compulsions
    • Avoidance
  • 2 elements of compulsions in OCD

    • Repetitive
    • Reduce anxiety
  • How are OCD compulsions repetitive?
    • People with OCD feel compelled to repeat a behaviour.
    • Examples are handwashing, counting, praying, tidying/ordering objects
  • How do OCD compulsions reduce anxiety?
    • Compulsive behaviours are performed to try and manage the anxiety produced by obsessions
    • For example, compulsive handwashing is carried out as a response to an obsessive fear of germs
  • Percentage of people with OCD who show compulsive behaviour alone and they have no obsessions
    Around 10%
  • Avoidance in OCD
    • Attempt to reduce their anxiety by keeping away from situations that trigger it
    • This avoidance can lead people to avoid very ordinary day-to-day situations that can interfere with leading a regular life
  • 3 emotional characteristics of OCD
    • Anxiety and Distress
    • Accompanying
    • Depression
    • Guilt and Disgust
  • Anxiety and distress in OCD
    • Powerful anxiety that accompanies both obsessions and compulsions
    • The urge to repeat a behaviour (a compulsion) can create anxiety
    • Compulsive behaviour tends to bring some relief from anxiety but this is only temporary
  • Accompanying depression in OCD
    OCD is often accompanied by depression,Low mood and lack of enjoyment in activities
  • Guilt and disgust in OCD
    Irrational guilt, such as over minor moral issues Disgust at something external (e.g. germs) or internal (e.g. the self)
  • 3 Cognitive characteristics of OCD
    • Obsessive thoughts
    • Cognitive coping strategies
    • Insight into excessive anxiety
  • Obsessive thoughts (Cognitive characteristics of OCD)

    Thoughts that recur over and over again These vary from person to person but are always unpleasant
  • Obsessive thoughts (Cognitive characteristics of OCD) Examples

    Impulse to hurt someoneThe door has been left unlocked, intruders will enter
  • Cognitive coping strategies (Cognitive characteristics of OCD)
    People can also respond to OCD by adapting cognitive coping strategies to deal with the obsessions
  • Cognitive coping strategies (Cognitive characteristics of OCD) Example

    A religious person tormented by obsessive guilt may respond by meditating
  • Insight into excessive anxiety (Cognitive characteristics of OCD)
    • People with OCD are aware their obsessions and compulsions are not rational
    • This is necessary for an OCD diagnosis
    • Despite this they may experience catastrophic thoughts and be hypervigilant/maintaining constant alertness
  • Two biological explanations for OCD
    • Genetic
    • Neural
  • What are genes?
    A small section of DNA which carries the information which determines your traits
  • What did Lewis find about genetics and OCD?
    Of his OCD patients, 37% had parents with OCD and 21% had siblings with OCD
  • What do Lewis's results suggest?
    These results suggest that genetics may play a role in OCD However, it can't just be genetics involved or the percentages would be much higher
  • What model explains genetic factors in OCD?
    Stress-diathesis
  • What does the stress-diathesis model suggest?
    People have a genetic vulnerability to mental health issues and stress causes the trigger of the gene
  • Candidate genes in OCD
    Genes which create vulnerability for OCD
    Some of these genes are involved in regulating the development of the serotonin system - 5HT1-D beta
  • What is meant my OCD is polygenetic?
    not caused by a combination of genetic variations which together increase vulnerability
  • How many genes did Taylor et al implicate in OCD?
    Around 230
  • Different genes causing OCD
    • Aetiologically heterogeneous - One group of genes may cause OCD in one person but a different group of genes may cause the disorder in another person
    • Different types of OCD may result from different genetic variations
  • Aetiology meaning
    Origins
  • Heterogeneous meaning
    Genes vary from person to person
  • Strength of the genetic explanation of OCD
    A strong evidence base
  • Why is "a strong evidence base" a strength of the genetic explanation of OCD?
    • Nestadt et al (2010): 68% MZ and 31% DZ share OCD
    • Must be environmental factors - Higher % for MZ twins - genetic component
    • Marini and Stebnicki, 2012 - Those with family diagnosed with OCD are 4 times as likely to develop it
    • Suggest that there must be a genetic influence on the development of OCD
  • Limitation of the genetic explanation of OCD
    There are also environmental risk factors
  • Why is "there are also environmental risk factors" a limitation of the genetic explanation of OCD?
    • While there is evidence for genetic explanations affecting an individuals vulnerability to OCD, it is not entirely genetic and environmental factors can also increase the risk of OCD
    • Cromer et al (2007) found that over half of the OCD clients in their sample had experienced a traumatic event in their past, OCD was also more severe in those with one or traumas
    • Genetic vulnerability only provides a partial explanation for OCD
  • 2 parts of the neural explanations for OCD
    Role of serotonin Decision-making systems