| What
is it? |
|
If you or someone you care about has been diagnosed with Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder (OCD), you may feel you are the only person facing the difficulties
of this illness. But you are not alone. In the United States, 1 in
50 adults currently has OCD, and twice that many have had it at some
point in their lives. Fortunately, very effective treatments for OCD
are now available to help you regain a more satisfying life. Here
are answers to the most commonly asked questions about OCD.
What Is Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?
Worries, doubts, superstitious beliefs all are common in everyday
life. However, when they become so excessive such as hours of hand
washing or make no sense at all such as driving around and around
the block to check that an accident didn't occur then a diagnosis
of OCD is made. In OCD, it is as though the brain gets stuck on a
particular thought or urge and just can't let go. People with OCD
often say the symptoms feel like a case of mental hiccups that won't
go away. OCD is a medical brain disorder that causes problems in information
processing. It is not your fault or the result of a "weak" or unstable
personality. Before the arrival of modern medications and cognitive
behavior therapy, OCD was generally thought to be untreatable. Most
people with OCD continued to suffer, despite years of ineffective
psychotherapy. Today, luckily, treatment can help most people with
OCD. Although OCD is usually completely curable only in some individuals,
most people achieve meaningful and long-term symptom relief with comprehensive
treatment.
|
| What are
the Symptoms of OCD? |
|
OCD usually involves having both obsessions and compulsions, though
a person with OCD may sometimes have only one or the other.
Table 1. Typical OCD Symptoms
| Common
Obsessions: |
Common
Compulsions: |
| Contamination fears of germs, dirt, etc. |
Washing |
| Imagining having harmed self or others |
Repeating |
| Imagining losing control or aggressive urges |
Checking |
| Intrusive sexual thoughts or urges |
Touching |
| Excessive religious or moral doubt |
Counting |
| Forbidden thoughts |
Ordering/arranging |
| A need to have things "just so" |
Hoarding or saving |
| A need to tell, ask, confess |
Praying |
OCD symptoms can occur in people of all ages. Not all
Obsessive-Compulsive behaviors represent an illness. Some rituals
(e.g., bedtime songs, religious practices) are a welcome part of daily
life. Normal worries, such as contamination fears, may increase during
times of stress, such as when someone in the family is sick or dying.
Only when symptoms persist, make no sense, cause much distress, or
interfere with functioning do they need clinical attention.
1. Obsessions.
Obsessions are thoughts, images, or impulses that occur over and over
again and feel out of your control. The person does not want to have
these ideas, finds them disturbing and intrusive, and usually recognizes
that they don't really make sense. People with OCD may worry excessively
about dirt and germs and be obsessed with the idea that they are contaminated
or may contaminate others. Or they may have obsessive fears of having
inadvertently harmed someone else (perhaps while pulling the car out
of the driveway), even though they usually know this is not realistic.
Obsessions are accompanied by uncomfortable feelings, such as fear,
disgust, doubt, or a sensation that things have to be done in a way
that is "just so."
2. Compulsions.
People with OCD typically try to make their obsessions go away by
performing compulsions. Compulsions are acts the person performs over
and over again, often according to certain "rules." People with an
obsession about contamination may wash constantly to the point that
their hands become raw and inflamed. A person may repeatedly check
that she has turned off the stove or iron because of an obsessive
fear of burning the house down. She may have to count certain objects
over and over because of an obsession about losing them. Unlike compulsive
drinking or gambling, OCD compulsions do not give the person pleasure.
Rather, the rituals are performed to obtain relief from the discomfort
caused by the obsessions.
3. Other features of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- OCD symptoms cause distress, take up a lot of time (more than
an hour a day), or significantly interfere with the person's work,
social life, or relationships.
- Most individuals with OCD recognize at some point that their obsessions
are coming from within their own minds and are not just excessive
worries about real problems, and that the compulsions they perform
are excessive or unreasonable. When someone with OCD does not recognize
that their beliefs and actions are unreasonable, this is called
OCD with poor insight.
- OCD symptoms tend to wax and wane over time. Some may be little
more than background noise; others may produce extremely severe
distress.
|
| When Does OCD
begin? |
|
OCD can start at any time from preschool age to adulthood (usually
by age 40).
One third to one half of adults with OCD report that it started during
childhood. Unfortunately, OCD often goes unrecognized.
On average, people with OCD see three to four doctors and spend over
9 years seeking treatment before they receive a correct diagnosis.
Studies have also found that it takes an average of 17 years from
the time OCD begins for people to obtain appropriate treatment.
OCD tends to be underdiagnosed and undertreated for a number of reasons.
People with OCD may be secretive about their symptoms or lack insight
about their illness. Many healthcare providers are not familiar with
the symptoms or are not trained in providing the appropriate treatments.
Some people may not have access to treatment resources.
This is unfortunate since earlier diagnosis and proper treatment,
including finding the right medications, can help people avoid the
suffering associated with OCD and lessen the risk of developing other
problems, such as depression or marital and work problems.
|
| Is it Inherited? |
| No specific genes for OCD have yet been identified, but
research suggests that genes do play a role in the development of the
disorder in some cases. Childhood-onset OCD tends to run in families
(sometimes in association with tic disorders). When a parent has OCD,
there is a slightly increased risk that a child will develop OCD, although
the risk is still low. When OCD runs in families, it is the general
nature of OCD that seems to be inherited, not specific symptoms. Thus
a child may have checking rituals, while his mother washes compulsively.
|
|
What Causes
OCD?
|
|
There is no single, proven cause of OCD.
Research suggests that OCD involves problems in communication between
the front part of the brain (the orbital cortex) and deeper structures
(the basal ganglia).
These brain structures use the chemical messenger serotonin. It is
believed that insufficient levels of serotonin are prominently involved
in OCD. Drugs that increase the brain concentration of serotonin often
help improve OCD symptoms.
Pictures of the brain at work also show that the brain circuits involved
in OCD return toward normal in those who improve after taking a serotonin
medication or receiving cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy.
Although it seems clear that reduced levels of serotonin play a role
in OCD, there is no laboratory test for OCD. Rather, the diagnosis
is made based on an assessment of the person's symptoms. When OCD
starts suddenly in childhood in association with strep throat, an
autoimmune mechanism may be involved, and treatment with an antibiotic
may prove helpful.
|
| Related Disorders: |
- Some disorders that closely resemble OCD and may respond to some
of the same treatments are Trichotillomania (compulsive hair pulling),
body dysmorphic disorder (imagined ugliness), and habit disorders,
such as nail biting or skin picking. While they share superficial
similarities, impulse control problems, such as substance abuse,
pathological gambling, or compulsive sexual activity, are probably
not related to OCD in any substantial way.
- The most common conditions that resemble OCD are the tic disorders
(Tourette's disorder and other motor and vocal tic disorders). Tics
are involuntary motor behaviors (such as facial grimacing) or vocal
behaviors (such as snorting) that often occur in response to a feeling
of discomfort. More complex tics, like touching or tapping tics,
may closely resemble compulsions. Tics and OCD occur together much
more often when the OCD or tics begin during childhood.
- Depression and OCD often occur together in adults, and, less commonly,
in children and adolescents. However, unless depression is also
present, people with OCD are not generally sad or lacking in pleasure,
and people who are depressed but do not have OCD rarely have the
kinds of intrusive thoughts that are characteristic of OCD.
- Although stress can make OCD worse, most people with OCD report
that the symptoms can come and go on their own. OCD is easy to distinguish
from a condition called posttraumatic stress disorder, because OCD
is not caused by a terrible event.
- Schizophrenia, delusional disorders, and other psychotic conditions
are usually easy to distinguish from OCD. Unlike psychotic individuals,
people with OCD continue to have a clear idea of what is real and
what is not.
- In children and adolescents, OCD may worsen or cause disruptive
behaviors, exaggerate a pre-existing learning disorder, cause problems
with attention and concentration, or interfere with learning at
school. In many children with OCD, these disruptive behaviors are
related to the OCD and will go away when the OCD is successfully
treated.
- Individuals with OCD may have substance-abuse problems, sometimes
as a result of attempts to self-medicate. Specific treatment for
the substance abuse is usually also needed.
- Individuals with OCD may have substance-abuse problems, sometimes
as a result of attempts to self-medicate. Specific treatment for
the substance abuse is usually also needed.
Only a small number of those with OCD have the collection of personality
traits called Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder (OCPD). Despite
its similar name, OCPD does not involve obsessions and compulsions,
but rather is a personality pattern that involves a preoccupation
with rules, schedules, and lists; perfectionism; an excessive devotion
to work; rigidity; and inflexibility. However, when people have both
OCPD and OCD, the successful treatment of the OCD often causes a favorable
change in the person's personality.
|
| How
is It Treated? |
|
The first step in treating OCD is educating the patient and family
about OCD and its treatment as a medical illness. During the last
20 years, two effective treatments for OCD have been developed: cognitive-behavioral
psychotherapy (CBT) and medication with a serotonin reuptake inhibitor
(SRI).
Stages Of Treatment:
- Acute treatment phase: Treatment is aimed at ending the current
episode of OCD.
- Maintenance treatment: Treatment is aimed at preventing future
episodes of OCD.
Components Of Treatment:
- Education: This is crucial in helping patients and families learn
how best to manage OCD and prevent its complications.
- Psychotherapy: Cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy (CBT) is the
key element of treatment for most patients with OCD.
- Medication: Medication with a serotonin reuptake inhibitor is
helpful for many patients.
EDUCATION
Is There Anything I Can Do To Help My Disorder?
Absolutely yes. You need to become an expert on your illness.
Since OCD can come and go many times during your life, you and your
family or others close to you need to learn all about OCD and its
treatment. This will help you get the best treatment and keep the
illness under control. Read books, attend lectures, talk to your doctor
or therapist, and consider joining the Obsessive-Compulsive Foundation.
A list of recommended readings and information resources is given
at the end of this handout. Being an informed patient is the surest
path to success.
How Often Should I Talk With My Clinician?
When beginning treatment, most people talk to their clinician at least
once a week to develop a CBT treatment plan and to monitor symptoms,
medication doses, and side effects. As you get better, you see your
clinician less often. Once you are well, you might see your clinician
only once a year.
Regardless of scheduled appointments or blood tests, call your clinician
if you have:
- Recurrent, severe OCD symptoms that come out of nowhere
- Worsening OCD symptoms that don't respond to strategies you learned
in CBT
- Changes in medication side effects New symptoms of another disorder
(e.g., panic or depression)
- A crisis (e.g., a job change) that might worsen your OCD
What Should I Do If I Feel Like Quitting Treatment?
It is normal to have occasional doubts and discomfort with your treatment.
Discuss your concerns and any discomforts with your doctor, therapist,
and family. If you feel a medication is not working or is causing
unpleasant side effects, tell your doctor. Don't stop or adjust your
medication on your own. You and your doctor can work together to find
the best and most comfortable medicine for you. Also, don't be shy
about asking for a second opinion from another clinician, especially
about the wisdom of cognitive-behavior therapy.
Consultations with an expert on medication or behavioral psychotherapy
can be a great help. Remember it is harder to get OCD under control
than to keep it there, so don't risk a relapse by stopping your treatment
without first talking to your clinician.
What Can Families And Friends Do To Help?
- Many family members feel frustrated and confused by the symptoms
of OCD. They don't know how to help their loved one. If you are
a family member or friend of someone with OCD, your first and most
important task is to learn as much as you can about the disorder,
its causes, and its treatment. At the same time, you must be sure
the person with OCD has access to information about the disorder.
We highly recommend the booklet, "Learning to Live with Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder" by Van Noppen et al. (Information on obtaining
this and other educational resources is given at the end of this
handout.) This booklet gives good advice and practical tips to help
family members help their loved ones and learn to cope with OCD.
Helping the person to understand that there are treatments that
can help is a big step toward getting the person into treatment.
When a person with OCD denies that there is a problem or refuses
to go for treatment, this can be very difficult for family members.
Continue to offer educational materials to the person. In some cases.
it may help to hold a family meeting to discuss the problem, in
a similar manner to what is often done when someone with alcohol
problems is in denial.
- Family problems don't cause OCD, but the way families react to
the symptoms can affect the disorder, just as the symptoms can cause
a great deal of disruption and many problems for the family. OCD
rituals can tangle up family members unmercifully, and it is sometimes
necessary for the family to go through therapy with the patient.
The therapist can help family members learn how to become gradually
disentangled from the rituals in small steps and with the patient's
agreement. Abruptly stopping your participation in OCD rituals without
the patient's consent is rarely helpful since you and the patient
will not know how to manage the distress that results. Your refusal
to participate will not help with those symptoms that are hidden
and, most important, will not help the patient learn a lifelong
strategy for coping with OCD symptoms.
- Negative comments or criticism from family members often make
OCD worse, while a calm, supportive family can help improve the
outcome of treatment. If the person views your help as interference,
remember it is the illness talking. Try to be as kind and patient
as possible since this is the best way to help get rid of the OCD
symptoms. Telling someone with OCD to simply stop their compulsive
behaviors usually doesn't help and can make the person feel worse,
since he or she is not able to comply. Instead, praise any successful
at tempts to resist OCD, while focusing your attention on positive
elements in the person's life. You must avoid expecting too much
or too little. Don't push too hard. Remember that nobody hates OCD
more than the person who has the disorder.
Treat people normally once they have recovered, but be alert for telltale
signs of relapse. If the illness is starting to come back, you may
notice it before the person does. Point out the early symptoms in
a caring manner and suggest a discussion with the doctor. Learn to
tell the difference between a bad day and OCD, however. It is important
not to attribute everything that goes poorly to OCD.
- Family members can help the clinicians treat the patient. When
your family member is in treatment, talk with the clinician if possible.
You could offer to visit the clinician with the person to share
your observations about how the treatment is going. Encourage the
patient to stick with medications and/or CBT. However, if the patient
has been on a certain treatment for a fairly long time with little
improvement in symptoms or has troubling side effects, encourage
the person to ask the doctor about other treatments or about getting
a second opinion.
- When children or adolescents have OCD, it is important for parents
to work with schools and teachers to be sure that they understand
the disorder. Just as with any child with an illness, patients still
need to set consistent limits and let the child or adolescent know
what is expected of him or her.
- Take advantage of the help available from support groups. Sharing
your worries and experiences with others who have gone through the
same things can be a big help. Support groups are a good way to
feel less alone and to learn new strategies for coping and helping
the person with OCD.
- Be sure to make time for yourself and your own life. If you are
helping to care for someone with severe OCD at home, try to take
turns "checking in" on the person so that no one family member or
friend bears too much of the burden. It is important to continue
to lead your own life and not let your self become a prisoner of
your loved one's rituals. You will then be better able to provide
support for your loved one.
|
| What
about Psychotherapy? |
|
Cognitive behavioral psychotherapy (CBT) is the psychotherapeutic
treatment of choice for children, adolescents, and adults with OCD.
In CBT, there is a logically consistent and compelling relationship
between the disorder, the treatment, and the desired outcome. CBT
helps the patient internalize a strategy for resisting OCD that will
be of lifelong benefit.
What Is CBT?
The BT in CBT stands for behavior therapy. Behavior therapy helps
people learn to change their thoughts and feelings by first changing
their behavior. Behavior therapy for OCD involves exposure and response
prevention (E/RP).
- Exposure is based on the fact that anxiety usually goes down after
long enough contact with something feared. Thus people with obsessions
about germs are told to stay in contact with "germy" objects (e.g.,
handling money) until their anxiety is extinguished. The person's
anxiety tends to decrease after repeated exposure until he no longer
fears the contact.
- For exposure to be of the most help, it needs to be combined with
response or ritual prevention (RP). In RP, the person's rituals
or avoidance behaviors are blocked. For example, those with excessive
worries about germs must not only stay in contact with "germy things,"
but must also refrain from ritualized washing.
Exposure is generally more helpful in decreasing anxiety and obsessions,
while response prevention is more helpful in de creasing compulsive
behaviors. Despite years of struggling with OCD symptoms, many people
have surprisingly little difficulty tolerating E/RP once they get
started.
- Cognitive therapy (CT) is the other component in CBT. CT is often
added to E/RP to help reduce the catastrophic thinking and exaggerated
sense of responsibility often seen in those with OCD. For example,
a teenager with OCD may believe that his failure to remind his mother
to wear a seat belt will cause her to die that day in a car accident.
CT can help him challenge the faulty assumptions in this obsession.
Armed with this proof, he will be better able to engage in E/RP,
for example, by not calling her at work to make sure she arrive
safely.
- Other techniques, such as thought stopping and distraction (suppressing
or "switching off" OCD symptoms), satiation (prolonged listening
to an obsession usually using a closed-loop audiotape), habit reversal
(replacing an OCD ritual with a similar but non-OCD behavior), and
contingency management (using rewards and costs as incentives for
ritual prevention) may sometimes be helpful but are generally less
effective than standard CBT.
People react differently to psychotherapy, just as they do to medicine.
CBT is relatively free of side effects, but all patients will have
some anxiety during treatment. CBT can be individual (you and your
doctor), group (with other people), or family. A physician may provide
both CBT and medication, or a psychologist or social worker may
provide CBT, while a physician man ages your medications. Regardless
of their specialties, those treating you should be knowledgeable
about the treatment of OCD and willing to cooperate in providing
your care.
How To Get The Most Out Of Psychotherapy ?
- Keep your appointments.
- Be honest and open.
- Do the homework assigned to you as part of your therapy.
- Give the therapist feedback on how the treatment is working.
Commonly Asked Questions About CBT :
- How successful is CBT? While as many as 25% of patients refuse
CBT, those who complete CBT report a 50%-80% reduction in OCD symptoms
after 12-20 sessions. Just as important, people with OCD who respond
to CBT usually stay well, often for years to come. When someone
is being treated with medication, using CBT with the medication
may help prevent relapse when the medication is stopped.
- How long does CBT take to work? When administered on a weekly
basis, CBT may take 2 months or more to show its full effects. Intensive
CBT, which involves 2-3 hours of therapist-assisted E/RP daily for
3 weeks, is the fastest treatment available for OCD.
- What is the best setting for CBT? Most patients do well with gradual
weekly CBT, in which they practice in the office with the therapist
once a week and then do daily E/RP homework. Homework is necessary
because the situations or objects that trigger OCD are unique to
the individual's environment and often cannot be reproduced in the
therapist's office. In intensive CBT, the therapist may come to
the patient's home or workplace to conduct E/RP sessions. On occasion,
the therapist may also do this in gradual CBT. In very rare cases,
when OCD is particularly severe, CBT is best conducted in a hospital
setting.
- How Can I Find A behavior therapist in my area? Depending on where
you live, finding a trained cognitive-behavioral psychotherapist
may be difficult, especially one trained to work with children and
adolescents.
To locate a therapist skilled in CBT for OCD, you may want to ask
your physician or other healthcare provider, an academic psychiatry
or psychology department, your local OCD support group, or the Obsessive-Compulsive
Foundation (a Treatment Providers List is available upon request),
the Anxiety Disorders Association of America, or the Association for
the Advancement of Behavioral Therapy (addresses and phone numbers
are given at the end of this handout).
In some cases, you may find that a local cognitive-behavioral psychotherapist
has experience with depression or other anxiety disorders, but not
with OCD. However, using one of the excellent treatment manuals now
available, it is relatively easy to translate CBT skills from another
disorder to OCD. So if there is no one immediately available, look
for a skilled psychologist or psychiatrist who is willing to learn.
Remember, though, if you are not getting real CBT, which involves
exposure and response prevention using a list of OCD symptoms that
are ranked from most difficult to easiest to resist, you are probably
not getting the treatment you need.
Don't be afraid to ask for a second opinion where necessary. In rare
cases, traveling to a specialized center where intensive CBT is available
on an outpatient or inpatient basis may be the most practical solution.
|
| Medication |
|
What Medications Are Used To Treat Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?
Research clearly shows that the serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs)
are uniquely effective treatments for OCD. These medications increase
the concentration of serotonin, a chemical messenger in the brain.
Five SRIs are currently available by prescription in the United States:
- Clomipramine (Anafranil, manufactured by Novartis)
- Fluoxetine (Prozac, manufactured by Lilly)
- Fluvoxamine (Luvox, manufactured by Solvay)
- Paroxetine (Paxil, manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline)
- Sertraline (Zoloft, manufactured by Pfizer)
- Citalopram (Celexa, marketed by Forest Laboratories, Inc.)
Fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, citalopram, and sertraline are
called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) because they
primarily affect only serotonin. Clomipramine is a nonselective SRI,
which means that it affects many other neurotransmitters besides serotonin.
This means that clomipramine has a more complicated set of side effects
than the SSRIs. For this reason, the SSRIs are usually tried first
since they are usually easier for people to tolerate.
How Well Do Medications Work?
When patients are asked about how well they are doing compared to
before starting treatment, they report marked to moderate improvement
after 8-10 weeks on a serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SRIs). Unfortunately,
fewer than 20% of those treated with medication alone end up with
no OCD symptoms. This is why medication is often combined with CBT
to get more complete and lasting results. About 20% don't experience
much improvement with the first SRI and need to try another SRI.
Which Medication Should I Choose First?
Studies show that all the SRIs are about equally effective. However,
to reduce the chance of side effects, most experts recommend beginning
treatment with one of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
If you or someone in your family did well or poorly with a medication
in the past, this may influence the choice. If you have medical problems
(e.g., an irritable stomach, problems sleeping) or are taking another
medication, these factors may cause your doctor to recommend one or
another medication to minimize side effects or to avoid possible drug
interactions.
What If The First Medication Doesn't Work?
First, it is important to remember that these medications don't work
right away. Most patients notice some benefit after 3 to 4 weeks,
while maximum benefit should occur after 10 to 12 weeks of treatment
at an adequate dose of medication. When it is clear that a medication
is not working well enough, most experts recommend switching to another
SRI. While most patients do equally well on any of the SRIs, some
will do better on one than another, so it is important to keep trying
until you find the medication and dosage schedule that is right for
you.
What Are The Side Effects Of These Medications?
In general, the SRIs are well tolerated by most people with OCD. The
four SSRIs (fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, and sertraline) have
similar side effects. These include nervousness, insomnia, restlessness,
nausea, and diarrhea. The mos-t common side effects of clomipramine
are dry mouth, sedation, dizziness, and weight gain. While all five
drugs can cause sexual problems, on average these are a bit more common
with clomipramine. Clomipramine is also more likely to cause problems
with blood pressure and irregular heart beats, so that children and
adolescents and patients with preexisting heart disease who are treated
with clomipramine must have electrocardiograms before beginning treatment
and at regular intervals during treatment.
Remember that all side effects depend on the dose of medication and
on how long you have been taking it. If side effects are a big issue,
it is important to start with a low dose and increase the dose slowly.
More severe side effects are associated with larger doses and a rapid
increase in the dose.
Tolerance to side effects may be more likely to develop with the
SSRIs than with clomipramine, so that many patients are better able
to tolerate the SSRIs than clomipramine over the long term. All SRIs
except fluoxetine should be tapered and stopped slowly because of
the possibility of the return of symptoms and withdrawal reactions.
Tell Your Doctor Right Away About Any Side Effects You Have.
Some people have different side effects than others and one person's
side effect (for example, unpleasant sleepiness) may actually help
another person (someone with insomnia). The side effects you may get
from medication depend on:
- The type and amount of medicine you take
- Your body chemistry
- Your age
- Other medicines you are taking
- Other medical conditions you have
If side effects are a problem for you, your doctor can try a number
of things to help:
- Reducing the amount of medicine: The doctor may gradually lower
the dose to try to achieve a dose low enough to reduce side effects
but not low enough to cause a relapse.
- Adding another medication may be helpful for some side effects,
such as trouble sleeping or sexual problems.
- Trying a different medicine to see if there are fewer or less
bothersome side effects: Even when a medication is clearly helping,
side effects sometimes make it intolerable. In such a case, trying
another SRI is a reasonable strategy.
Remember: Changing medicine is a complicated, potentially risky decision.
Don't stop your medicine or change the dose on your own. Discuss any
medication problems you are having with your doctor.
Does It Help To Add CBT Or Another Medication To An SRI?
- When medication has produced only a little benefit after 6 weeks,
adding CBT or another medication to the SRI is also sometimes useful.
- Many experts believe that CBT is the most helpful treatment to
add when someone with OCD is not responding well to medication alone.
When people continue to avoid the things that make them anxious
or continue to do rituals, this blocks the effects of the medication.
For the medication to work, therefore, the person with OCD must
try to resist doing rituals. Adding CBT to medication is helpful
because it teaches those with OCD to expose themselves to the triggers
that make them anxious and then to resist performing rituals.
It may also be helpful to add one of the following types of medications
to an SRI:
- Low dose clomipramine to an SSRI
- An anxiety-reducing medication, such as clonazepam or alprazolam,
in patients with high levels of anxiety
- A high potency neuroleptic, such as haloperidol or risperidone,
when tics or thought disorder symptoms are present.
These complex medication strategies are best reserved for those who
have not done well with a combination of SRI and CBT.
Before deciding that a treatment has failed, your therapist needs
to be sure that the treatment has been given in a large enough dose
for a sufficient period of time. There is little consensus among the
OCD experts on what to do next when someone with OCD fails to respond
to expert CBT plus well-delivered, sequential SRI trials. Switching
from an SSRI to clomipramine may improve the chances that a previously
non-responsive patient may have a good response. Most experts recommend
considering a trial of clomipramine after 2 or 3 failed SSRI trials.
Occasionally, a doctor may wish to combine an SSRI with clomipramine
either to reduce side effects or to increase the potential benefits
of medication. In the adult with extremely severe and unremitting
OCD, neurosurgical treatment to interrupt specific brain circuits
that are malfunctioning can be very helpful.
In patients who have severe OCD and depressions electroconvulsive
therapy (ECT) may be of benefit.
Answers To Other Questions About Medications :
- If you think you might be pregnant or are planning to become pregnant,
most experts prefer to treat OCD with CBT alone. However, if medications
are necessary (and they may be since OCD commonly gets worse during
pregnancy), it is better to use them sparingly and to select an
SSRI rather than clomipramine.
- The SSRIs are preferred in patients with renal failure or coexisting
heart disease who require medication.
- When another psychiatric disorder is present, your doctor will
likely mix and match treatment for the other conditions with treatment
for OCD. Sometimes, the same medication can be used for two disorders
(e.g., an SRI for OCD and panic disorder). In other cases, such
as concurrent mania and OCD, more than one medication will be necessary
(e.g., a mood stabilizer and an SRI).
- Laboratory tests are necessary before and during treatment with
clomipramine but not with the SSRIs.
- The SRIs are not addictive, but it is a good idea to stop them
gradually.
Is Hospitalization An Option?
People with OCD can almost always be treated as outpatients.
In very rare cases in which the OCD involves severe depression or
aggressive impulses, hospitalization may be necessary for safety.
When a person has very severe OCD or the OCD is complicated by a medical
or Neuropsychiatric illness, hospitalization can sometimes be a useful
way to give intensive CBT.
Do I Have To Choose Between CBT And Medication?
No single approach works best for everyone with OCD, although most
people probably do best with CBT alone or CBT plus an SRI. The treatment
choice will of course depend on the patient's preference. Some people
prefer to start with medication to avoid the time and trouble associated
with CBT; others prefer to begin with CBT to avoid medication side
effects.
Many, if not most, people seem to prefer combination treatment.
The need for medication depends on the severity of the OCD and the
age of the person. In milder OCD, CBT alone is often the initial choice,
but medication may also be needed if CBT is not effective enough.
Individuals with severe OCD or complicating conditions that may interfere
with CBT (e.g., panic disorder, depression) often need to start with
medication, adding CBT once the medicine has provided some relief.
In younger patients, clinicians are more likely to use CBT alone.
However, trained cognitive-behavioral psychotherapists are in short
supply. Thus, when CBT is not available, medication may become the
treatment of choice. Consequently, it is likely that many more people
with OCD receive medication than CBT.
Before deciding on a treatment approach, you and your clinician will
need to assess your OCD symptoms, other disorders you have, the availability
of CBT, and your wishes and desires about what treatment you want.
Try to find a clinician who will talk to you about these possibilities
so that you can make your own best choice among the options available
to you.
What If I Belong To A Managed Care Network?
More and more people in the United States are receiving their medical
care in some kind of managed care setting (Preferred provider organizations
etc.). If you have OCD, it is important that you talk to your case
manager or administrator to find out what types of therapy are available
in your network.
Many managed care programs are instituting group therapy programs
as a means of providing appropriate treatment at an affordable cost.
What If I Can't Afford The Medications?
The companies who manufacture the five SRI medications listed above
each have a special program to provide free medications for patients
who cannot afford them. The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers
Association publishes a directory of programs for those who cannot
afford medications,You or your doctor can also contact the companies
directly:
- Novartis Patient Support Program: 800:257-3273
- Lilly Cares Program: 800:545-6962
- Pfizer Prescription Assistance: 800:646-4455
- GlaxoSmithKline Paxil Access to Care Program:
800:546-0420 (patient requests);
215:751-5722 (physician requests)
Solvay Patient Assistance Program: 800:788-9277
MAINTENANCE TREATMENT :
Once OCD symptoms are eliminated or much reduced -- a goal which is
practical for the majority of those with OCD then maintenance of treatment
gains becomes the goal.
Maintaining Treatment Gains :
- When patients have completed a successful course of treatment
for OCD, most experts recommend monthly follow-up visits for at
least 6 months and continued treatment for at least 1 year before
trying to stop medications or CBT.
- Relapse is very common when medication is withdrawn, particularly
if the person has not had the benefit of CBT. Therefore, many experts
recommend that patients continue medication if they do not have
access to CBT.
- Individuals who have repeated episodes of OCD may need to receive
long-term or even lifelong prophylactic medication. The experts
recommend such long-term treatment after 2 to 4 severe relapses
or 3 to 4 milder relapses.
Discontinuing Treatment :
- When someone has done well with maintenance treatment and does
not need long-term medication, most experts suggest discontinuing
medication only very gradually, while giving CBT booster sessions
to prevent relapse. Gradual medication withdrawal usually involves
lowering the dose by 25% and then waiting 2 months before lowering
it again, depending on how the person responds.
- Because OCD is a lifetime waxing and waning condition, you should
always feel comfortable returning to your clinician if your OCD
symptoms come back.
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| CONTRIBUTIONS
AND SPEACIAL THANKS |
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Since our web-site http://www.mental-guide.cjb.com is a heavy resource
of Mental Illness we would like to thank all contributors and writers
for this booklet which was taken from theire own source found in our
Links archive.
The Expert Consensus Panel for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
The following participants in the Expert Consensus Survey were identified
from several sources: participants in a recent NIMH consensus conference
on OCD; participants in the International Obsessive Compulsive Disorders
Conference (IOCDC); members of the Obsessive-Compulsive Foundation
Scientific Advisory Board; and other published clinical researchers.
Of the 79 experts to whom we sent the obsessive-compulsive disorder
survey, 69 (87%) replied. The recommendations in the guidelines reflect
the aggregate opinions of the experts and do not necessarily reflect
the opinion of each individual on each question.
Margaret Altemus, M.D. NIMH
Tana A. Grady, M.D. Duke University Medical Center
Frederick Penzel, Ph.D. Huntington. New York
Jambur V. Ananth, M.D. Harbor-UCLA Medical Center
Benjamin Greenberg, M.D. NIMH
Katharine A. Phillips, M.D. Butler Hospital
Lee Baer, Ph.D. Massachusetts General Hospital
Daniel Greenberg, M.D. Jerusalem Mental Health Center, Herzog
Hospital
Teresa A. Pigott, M.D. University of Texas Medical Branch-Galveston
David H. Barlow, Ph.D. Boston University
John H. Greist, M.D. Dean Foundation for Health Research
C. Alec Pollard, Ph.D. St. Louis University
Donald W. Black, M.D. University of Iowa
Gregory Hanna, M.D. University of Michigan Medical Center,
Child & Adolescent Psychiatric Hospital
Lawrence Price, M.D. Brown University
Pierre Blier, M.D. McGill University
William A. Hewlett, M.D. Vanderbilt Medical School
S. Rachman, Ph.D. University of British Columbia
Maria Lynn Buttolph, M.D. Massachusetts General Hospital
Eric Hollander, M.D. Mt. Sinai School of Medicine
Judith L. Rapoport, M.D. NIMH
Cheryl Carmin, Ph.D. University of Illinois, Chicago
Bruce Hyman, Ph.D. Hollywood, Florida
Steven A. Rasmussen, M.D. Butler Hospital
Cheryl Carmin, Ph.D. University of Illinois, Chicago
James W. Jefferson, M.D. Dean Foundation for Health Research
Scott Rauch, M.D. Massachusetts General Hospital
Diane Chambless, Ph.D. University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
Michael A. Jenike, M.D. Harvard Medical School
Mark A. Riddle, M.D. Johns Hopkins
Arturo Marrero, M.D. Newark Beth Israel Hospital
Richard Swinson, M.D. Clarke Institute of Psychiatry
Randy Frost, Ph.D. Smith College
Christopher McDougle, M.D. Yale University School of Medicine
Barbara Van-Noppen, ACSW Brown University
Daniel Geller, M.D. McLean Hospital
Fugen Neziroglu, Ph.D. Institute for Bio-Behavioral Therapy
& Research, Great Neck, New York
Lorne Warneke, M.D. University of Alberta, Edmonton
Wayne K. Goodman, M.D. University of Florida College of Medicine
Michele Pato, M.D. SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo General Hospital
Jose Yaryura-Tobias, M.D. Institute for Bio-Behavioral Therapy
& Research, Great Neck, New York
The Obsessive-Compulsive Foundation (OCF)
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