My OCD Den
|
Obsessively Medicated
A guide to the treatments and medications for OCD
- There are two methods of treatment for sufferers of OCD. The first is
the use of Drug Therapy. Mainly SRI's (Serotonin reuptake inhibitors)
and SSRI's (SELECTIVE Serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are used to increase the
levels of Serotonin - a chemical messenger in the Brain. The other is
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
(CBT).
- Serotonin is used by certain nerve cells in the brain to communicate
with other brain cells. Under the right conditions, these nerve cells (called
neurons) release Serotonin neurotransmitters, which then affect neighboring
cells. After the Serotonin is released, it is taken back up into the cell so
that it can be used again.
- Each of the Anti-OCD drugs interfere with the Serotonin being recycled
once it has been released, and this allows it to spend more time outside the
cell, where it can continue affecting neighboring cells, thus doing its job
longer. How or why this reduces obsessions and compulsions is still unknown.
Anti-OCD medications control symptoms, but do not "cure" the
disorder.
- The main SRI is
ANAFRANIL (Clomipramine) an older Trcyclic anti-depressant,
that has an effect on other Neurotransmitters beside just Serotonin - therefore
it's not selective. The main SSRI's are
PROZAC (Fluoxatine), LUVOX (Fluvoxamine), ZOLOFT (Sertraline),
PAXIL (Paroxatine), and CELEXA (Citalopram).
- The other method of treatment,
CBT
(Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy), often referred to as exposure and response
prevention, exposes the patient to her or his obsessional fear (for
example, making a germ-obsessed person touch a dirty floor) and then delays
their compulsive response (immediately washing their hands). The aim is to ease
distress. Over a period of time the person learns to become less and less
afraid and anxious by their fears - they learn to handle the anxiety.
- This type of behavioral treatment is advocated and studied by Dr.
Jeffrey Schwartz, a leading authority on OCD and the author of a book,
Brain Lock. He believes that OCDers must learn NOT
to give in to their gut feelings and obsessions. By resisting the rituals - no
matter how hard that is to do - the OCDer is learning a proper response to
normal behaviour, where as giving in to the obsession actually makes the person
worse.
- Whatever the person does regularly, good or bad behavior, the brain
picks up and does automatically. So, if that behavior is good behavior the
brain's chemistry will start to change. He suggests there are four basic steps
which allow an OCDer to do behavior and response prevention on their own
without a therapist. These are as follows:
- Step 1. Relabel
Learn to recognize obsessive
thoughts and compulsive urges - and do so assertively. Start calling them
"obsessions" and "compulsions." Realize they
are symptoms of your illness and not REAL problems. For example, if your hands
feel dirty or contaminated, train yourself to say "I don't really think my
hands are dirty; I'm having an obsession that they are. I don't really need to
wash my hands; I'm having a compulsion to do so." After a while the brain
learns to realize that these are just false alarms - false messages caused by
the imbalance. You can't make the thoughts and urges go away because they are
caused by this biological imbalance, but you can control and change your
behavior response.
- Step 2. Reattribute
"It's not me, it's my OCD." Learn to reattribute the cause of these
thoughts and urges to their real cause. This will increase your willpower and
enable you to fight off the urge to wash or check.
- Step 3. Refocus
This is where the real hard work is done. Learn to refocus your mind on
something else. Choose something pleasant like a hobby - listen to music, play
sport, go for a walk, whatever it takes to make your mind think of something
other than the obsessions and compulsions that it WANTS to think about. Say to
yourself, "I'm experiencing a symptom of
OCD. I must refocus and do another behavior." This is not easy, and a
person should adopt a FIFTEEN MINUTE RULE. They should delay their response by
letting some time elapse, preferably fifteen minutes, but a shorter waiting
time at first. During this time they should re-check through all the steps. Be aware that
the intrusive thoughts and urges are a result of OCD and that this is an
illness, a biochemical imbalance in the brain. Try to focus on something else.
After the fifteen minutes, reassess the urges. Take note of any change in their
intensity and this will give the person courage to wait longer next time. The
longer it's left the greater the decrease in intensity.
- Step 4. Revalue
Begin to realize that these thoughts and urges are a result of OCD, and
learn to place less importance on them and less importance on the OCD. Learn to
take back control, take charge. In the short term, feelings can't be changed
but behavior can be, and in time the feelings change too. Dr Schwartz, in his
conclusion, says, "We who have OCD must learn to train our minds not to
take intruding feelings at face value. We must learn that these feelings
mislead us. In a gradual but tempered way, we must change our responses to the
feelings and resist them."
Brain Lock by Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz.
home
/ about me
/ inside my ocd mind
/ ocd diary
/ poetry
signs-symptoms /
ocd children /
ocd treatment /
family & friends
bulletin board /
email me
|
|
advertisement
|