P - The biological approach to explaining OCD Flashcards
What approach do we study for explaining OCD?
The biological approach
What does the genetic explanation of explaining OCD say is the cause of OCD?
Specific genes being inherited from parents related to the onset of OCD.
What genes do we need to know about in the biological approach to explaining OCD?
COMT and SERT genes.
What does the COMT gene do?
Regulates the production of the neurotransmitter dopamine and is involved in the production of catechol-O-methyltransferase.
What does COMT stand for?
Catechol -O-methyltransferase.
What do genes come in?
Different forms (alleles).
Where has one form/allele of the COMT gene found to be more common?
In OCD patients compared to people without the disorder.
The COMT gene is more common in OCD sufferers - what does this do to the COMT genes activity and the levels of dopamine?
Lowers the activity levels of the COMT gene but means there is a higher level of dopamine (Tukel et al., 2013).
What is the SERT gene also known as?
5-HTT
What does the SERT gene do?
Affects the transport of the serotonin, creating lower levels of this neurotransmitter.
What is the study done on the SERT gene?
Study found a mutation of this gene in 2 unrelated families where 6 out of the 7 family members had OCD (Ozaki et al., 2003).
What does diathesis-stress model suggest in OCD and other disorders?
That each individual gene only creates a vulnerability (a diathesis) for OCD as well as other conditions, such as depression. Other factors (‘stressors’) affect what condition develops or indeed whether any mental illness develops.
Therefore some people could possess the COMT or SERT gene variations but suffer no ill effects.
What is concordance rate?
A measure of genetic similarity.
In a sample of, for example, 100 twin pairs, one twin of each pair has a phobic disorder. The number of times their other twin also shows the illness determines the concordance rate,so if 40 have phobic disorder, then the concordance rate is 40%.
What is dopamine?
One of the key neurotransmitters in the brain, with effects on motivation and ‘drive’.
What is a gene?
A part of the chromosome of an organism that carries information in the form of DNA.