More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Best Practices for Treating Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in Primary Care Setting
Laurie Barclay, MD, Medscape Medical News
August 24, 2009

Recommendations for diagnosing and treating obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in the primary care setting are reviewed in the August 1 issue of American Family Physician.

"...OCD is a neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by recurrent distressing thoughts and repetitive behaviors or mental rituals performed to reduce anxiety," write Jill N. Fenske, MD, and Thomas L. Schwenk, MD, from the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor.

"Symptoms are often accompanied by feelings of shame and secrecy because patients realize the thoughts and behaviors are excessive or unreasonable. This secrecy, along with a lack of recognition of OCD symptoms by health care professionals, often leads to a long delay in diagnosis and treatment. OCD has a reputation of being difficult to treat, but there are many effective treatments available."

Despite the considerable distress and disability accompanying OCD, it is often unrecognized and undertreated. Primary care physicians should be able to recognize various presentations of OCD as well as clues regarding the presence of obsessions or compulsions. Children with OCD and adults who are refractory to treatment should be referred to a specialist.

Subtypes of OCD
Various subtypes of OCD, and their typical presenting features, are as follows:

  • Early-onset OCD: This subtype typically manifests symptoms before puberty, with higher frequency of tics and other psychiatric comorbidities vs the other OCD subtypes. Compulsions, which are often severe and frequent, usually are evident before obsessions develop. Early-onset OCD is less responsive to first-line therapy than the other subtypes, and there is a strong familial predisposition, with incidence of 17% among first-degree relatives.
  • Hoarding OCD: Patients with this subtype usually have less insight vs other OCD subtypes and may be less responsive to psychological therapy. Symptoms are often more severe, with a greater degree of global impairment, and rates of psychiatric comorbidities are higher, especially for social phobia.
  • "Just right" OCD: In this subtype, the primary manifestation is a desire for circumstances or things to be "perfect," "certain," or "under control," resulting in a need to repeat certain actions to alleviate the uncomfortable feeling.
  • Primary obsessional OCD: This subtype occurs in one quarter of patients, with common themes including sex, violence, and religion. Although overt compulsions are absent, patients are not free from rituals, which may be mental, such as praying, counting, or reciting "good words." Although this subtype has been considered to be less responsive to treatment, patients do respond to medication and exposure and response prevention.
  • Scrupulosity OCD: This subtype, which is characterized by religious or moral obsessions, can be devastating for patients in whom faith or religious affiliation is important. The obsessions may involve blasphemous thoughts or focus on whether the patient has committed a sin, and the accompanying compulsions may include prayer, seeking reassurance from clergy, or excessive confession.
  • Tic-related OCD: This subtype overlaps significantly with early-onset OCD, and many patients meet criteria for Tourette's syndrome. Comorbid conditions often occur, such as, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, body dysmorphic disorder, trichotillomania, social anxiety, and/or mood disorders. Hoarding and somatic obsessions typically occur. This subtype often requires combination treatment including a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) and an atypical antipsychotic.
Initial OCD Treatment Steps
Important initial steps in facilitating recovery include correct diagnosis and educating the patient concerning the nature of OCD. Treatment is indicated when OCD symptoms cause impaired function or significant distress for the patient. Although treatment rarely cures the patient with OCD, significant symptomatic relief is achievable. Reasonable goals for treatment would be to spend less than 1 hour per day on obsessive-compulsive behaviors, causing minimal interference with daily activities.

First-line therapy should consist of cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure and response prevention, or pharmacotherapy with an SSRI, such as citalopram, escitalopram, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, or sertraline. Physicians should be aware that medication dosages required in OCD often exceed those needed for other indications, and there is also usually a longer duration of treatment needed before response becomes apparent.

For patients with OCD who are resistant to treatment, feasible options for therapy may include augmentation of an SSRI with an atypical antipsychotic. Because OCD is a chronic condition with a high rate of relapse, treatment should be discontinued only with caution. Patients with OCD should be carefully monitored to detect possible comorbid depression and suicidal ideation.

OCD Clinical Recommendations
Specific key clinical recommendations for practice, and their accompanying level of evidence rating, are as follows:

  • Cognitive behavioral therapy including exposure and response prevention is an effective modality for OCD treatment (level of evidence, A).
  • Recommended first-line pharmacotherapy for OCD is SSRIs, which have been shown to be effective (level of evidence, A).
  • In some patients with treatment-resistant OCD, augmentation of SSRI therapy with atypical antipsychotic agents is effective (level of evidence, B).
  • Optimal duration for a trial of SSRI treatment is 8 to 12 weeks, with at least 4 to 6 weeks at the maximal tolerable dosage (level of evidence, C).
  • Before attempting discontinuation of SSRIs, patients should take these drugs for at least 1 to 2 years. To help prevent relapse when SSRIs are discontinued, the treating physician should consider exposure and response prevention "booster" sessions (level of evidence, C).
  • Patients with OCD should be monitored for psychiatric comorbidities and suicide risk (level of evidence, C).
"Patients with treatment-resistant OCD should be referred to a subspecialist," the study authors conclude. "There are a variety of treatment options for these patients, but the evidence for most therapies is based on small preliminary studies or expert opinion. Partial hospitalization and residential treatment facilities are options for patients with severe, treatment-resistant OCD."

Reference:
Am Fam Physician. 2009;80:239-245. {Abstract]
 

Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
Regarding scrupulosity:

"Let He Who Is Without Sin:" OCD and Religion
By Fred Penzel, Ph.D., OCD Chicago

If you had to sum up most of OCD in two words, they would be “pathological doubt.” OCD can cast doubt on almost any aspect of a person’s life and can force them to question almost anything they are, or anything they do. OCD is also extremely insidious and can infiltrate anything that matters to you. I have heard many of my patients state that “OCD seems to know how to pick on whatever will bother me the most.”

One particular area that is of great importance and sensitivity to many people is their religion and matters of religious practice. It is something that they would like to feel is the most certain in their lives. As you could guess, this turns out to be a prime target for obsessive thoughts...

Naturally, the stronger a sufferer’s beliefs, or the more orthodox their sect, the more distressful and upsetting these symptoms can be...

Recovering from OCD means taking risks, and this means letting go, not just in the sense of letting go of compulsions, but also in terms of letting go of that need for certainty in the face of obsessive doubt. Doing certain types of behavioral homework assignments for OCD may sometimes make a person feel as if they are jeopardizing their immortal soul, but there are times when in order to prevail over the illness, they have to take a leap of faith. There is a very good saying that is used by the members of Alcoholics Anonymous: “Let go, let God.” My own interpretation of this for our purposes is that, if you have faith and truly believe, you sometimes have to put yourself into God’s hands and trust that you will be guided in the right direction.

It is also important for patients to understand that they will not have to go on doing these types of assignments indefinitely - only until they reach the point of recovery.

Can everyone get past their obsessive religious fears in order to take what look like risks in the service of recovering? The answer is that not everyone can. Although I have seen quite a number of people recover from this particular type of OCD, not everyone is ready or able to recover at a given time, nor may they have the insight to see what is really happening. Some people find their thoughts extremely believable, due to the magnitude of their biochemical problem. Their fear of damnation or punishment at a particular time may override their desire to reach a recovery. However, if an OCD sufferer can accept and understand the true nature of treatment, they stand a better chance of improving. They need to accept that the subject matter of the thoughts involves the very aspects of their lives about which they want to be the most certain. Faith has helped many individuals overcome great obstacles in life, and when correctly channeled, it can also help to overcome OCD.

Also: Scrupulosity: Blackmailed by OCD in the Name of God

---------- Post added at 12:47 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:57 AM ----------

Regarding "just right" OCD:

Over 50% of those with OCD experience “just right” obsessions or compulsions. Those with “just right” OCD symptoms are likely to have:

  • perfectionism (e.g., concern over mistakes)
  • "obsessional slowness" (i.e., loss of time due to obsessional ‘loops’)
  • a need for control/predictability
  • ordering/arranging/symmetry behaviors/evening-up
  • a sense that the mind does not rest (i.e. a mental ‘broken record’)
  • greater difficulty making decisions
  • reassurance-seeking (i.e., comparing notes with others, to determine whether their sense of something being ‘off’ is valid)
  • counting rituals
  • repetitive behaviors
  • checking behaviors
  • procrastination (i.e. “putting off” tasks)
  • trouble delegating tasks
  • general inflexibility
"Just Right" OCD Symptoms
 
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