OCD Flashcards
1
Q
Obsessions
A
persistent ideas, thoughts, impulses, or images that are experienced as intrusive and inappropriate and cause marked anxiety or distress
- Thoughts about hurting someone - Did I lock the front door? - I am going to pick up a virus
2
Q
Compulsions
A
repetitive behaviors or mental acts of which the goal is to prevent or reduce anxiety or distress
- hand washing - checking - counting
3
Q
Diagnosis
A
- presence of obsessions or compulsions- can be mental or behavioral
- obsessions or compulsions must take more than 1 hour/day
- some individuals do not recognize the senseless nature of their obsessions or compulsions
- related to hoarding disorder, body dysmorphic disorder (preoccupation with perceived defects or flaws), trichotillomania (hair-pulling), excoriation (skin-picking)
- common symptom dimensions: cleaning, symmetry, forbidden thoughts, and harm to self or others
4
Q
OCD Characteristics
A
- about 1% of the population over 12 months
- no large gender difference
- development is gradual
- modal onset is 13-15 for males and 20-24 for females
- comorbidity is high; 49% comorbid anxiety; 27% comorbid MDD
5
Q
Interventions
A
- exposure and response prevention
- Medications like clomipramine (CMI), or ssri’s (fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, sertaline) often used, no definitive outcome benefit
- intensive daily sessions
- Imaginal and in vivo exposure
- involve significant others?-studies have shown no real benefit, but it is helpful to have a spouse or friend and take the pressure off the therapist
6
Q
Protocol for Exposure and Response Prevention
A
- identify threat cues, avoidance, rituatls, and feared consequences
- introduce SUDS (Subjective Units of Discomfort Scale), 0-100
- rule out other disorders (SA, MDD)
- Introduce ERP (breaking two associations: 1- stimulus and anxiety, and 2- response behavior and anxiety reduction
- assign hw to monitor symptoms
- develop a suds hierarchy
- being exposure treatments (both imaginal and in vivo)
- assign exposure hw (2 hr) between sessions
- remind patients about response prevention and encourage them
- conduct home visits (4 hour exposure sessions)
- Develop a maintenance schedule