OCD Brochure
- How Common is OCD?
- Key Features of OCD
- What Causes OCD?
- What the Family Can Do to Help
- If You Have Special Needs
- For Further Information
- References
WHAT CAUSES OCD?
The old belief that OCD was the result of life experiences has been weakened
before the growing evidence that biological factors are a primary contributor
to the disorder. The fact that OCD patients respond well to specific medications
that affect the neurotransmitter serotonin suggests the disorder has a
neurobiological basis. For that reason, OCD is no longer attributed only
to attitudes a patient learned in childhood--for example, an inordinate
emphasis on cleanliness, or a belief that certain thoughts are dangerous
or unacceptable. Instead, the search for causes now focuses on the interaction
of neurobiological factors and environmental influences, as well as cognitive
processes.
OCD is sometimes accompanied by depression, eating disorders, substance
abuse disorder, a personality disorder, attention deficit disorder, or
another of the anxiety disorders. Co-existing disorders can make OCD more
difficult both to diagnose and to treat.
In an effort to identify specific biological factors
that may be important in the onset or persistence of OCD, NIMH-supported
investigators have used a device called the positron emission tomography
(PET) scanner to study the brains of patients with OCD. Several groups
of investigators have obtained findings from PET scans suggesting that
OCD patients have patterns of brain activity that differ from those of
people without mental illness or with some other mental illness.
Brain-imaging studies of OCD showing abnormal neurochemical
activity in regions known to play a role in certain neurological disorders
suggest that these areas may be crucial in the origins of OCD. There is
also evidence that treatment with medications or behavior therapy induce
changes in the brain coincident with clinical improvement.
Recent preliminary studies of the brain using magnetic resonance imaging
showed that the subjects with obsessive-compulsive disorder had significantly
less white matter than did normal control subjects, suggesting a widely
distributed brain abnormality in OCD. Understanding the significance of
this finding will be further explored by functional neuroimaging and neuropsychological
studies (Jenike et al, 1996).
Symptoms of OCD are seen in association with some other neurological
disorders. There is an increased rate of OCD in people with Tourette's
syndrome, an illness characterized by involuntary movements and vocalizations.
Investigators are currently studying the hypothesis that a genetic relationship
exists between OCD and the tic disorders.
Other illnesses that may be linked to OCD are trichotillomania (the repeated
urge to pull out scalp hair, eyelashes, eyebrows or other body hair), body
dysmorphic disorder (excessive preoccupation with imaginary or exaggerated
defects in appearance), and hypochondriasis (the fear of having--despite
medical evaluation and reassurance--a serious disease). Genetic studies
of OCD and other related conditions may enable scientists to pinpoint the
molecular basis of these disorders.
Other theories about the causes of OCD focus on the interaction between
behavior and the environment and on beliefs and attitudes, as well as how
information is processed. These behavioral and cognitive theories are not
incompatible with biological explanations.
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