(Press-News.org) New scientific evidence challenges a popular conception that behaviours such as repetitive hand-washing, characteristic of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), are carried out in response to disturbing obsessive fears.
The study, conducted at the University of Cambridge in collaboration with the University of Amsterdam, found that in the case of OCD the behaviours themselves (the compulsions) might be the precursors to the disorder, and that obsessions may simply be the brain's way of justifying these behaviours. The research provides important insight into how the debilitating repetitive behaviour of OCD develops and could lead to more effective treatments and preventative measures for the disorder.
The research, funded by the Wellcome Trust and published in the renowned American Journal of Psychiatry, tested 20 patients suffering from the disorder and 20 control subjects (without OCD) on a task which looked at the tendency to develop habit-like behaviour. Subjects were required to learn simple associations between stimuli, behaviours and outcomes in order to win points on a task.
The team, led by Claire Gillan and Trevor Robbins at the University of Cambridge MRC/Wellcome Trust Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute and Sanne de Wit at the University of Amsterdam, found that patients suffering from the disorder had a tendency to continue to respond regardless of whether or not their behaviour produced a desirable outcome. In other words, this behaviour was habitual. The discovery that compulsive behaviour – the irresistible urge to perform a task - can be observed in the laboratory, in the absence of any related obsessions, suggests that compulsions may be the critical feature of OCD.
Indeed, one of the most effective treatments for OCD is cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which typically involves a method known as "exposure and response prevention". This technique challenges patients to discontinue compulsive responding, and learn that the feared consequence does not occur, whether or not the behaviour is performed. The effectiveness of this treatment is compatible with the idea that compulsions, and not obsessions, are critical in OCD. Once the compulsion is stopped, the obsession tends to fade away.
"It has long been established that humans have a tendency to 'fill in the gaps' when it comes to behaviour that cannot otherwise be logically explained," said Claire Gillan, a PhD student at the University of Cambridge. "In the case of OCD, the overwhelming urge to senselessly repeat a behaviour might be enough to instil a very real obsessive fear in order to explain it."
###
For additional information please contact:
Genevieve Maul, Office of Communications, University of Cambridge
Tel: direct, +44 (0) 1223 765542, +44 (0) 1223 332300
Mob: +44 (0) 7774 017464
Email: Genevieve.maul@admin.cam.ac.uk
Notes to editors:
1. The paper "Disruption in the Balance Between Goal-Directed Behavior and Habit Learning in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder" was published in the July print edition of the American Journal of Psychiatry. The authors include: Gillan CM, Papmeyer M, Morein-Zamir S, Sahakian BJ, Fineberg NA, Robbins TW, de Wit S (2011).
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/reprint/appi.ajp.2011.10071062v1
2. About the Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. It supports the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities. The Trust's breadth of support includes public engagement, education and the application of research to improve health. It is independent of both political and commercial interests.
www.wellcome.ac.uk
3. For additional information about OCD, you can contact: OCD Action: Help and Information Support Line: 0845 390 6232, www.ocdaction.org.uk
New research provides insight into how OCD develops
Study shows that compulsions lead to obsessions, and not the other way around
2011-05-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
What doesn't kill the brain makes it stronger
2011-05-23
Johns Hopkins scientists say that a newly discovered "survival protein" protects the brain against the effects of stroke in rodent brain tissue by interfering with a particular kind of cell death that's also implicated in complications from diabetes and heart attack.
Reporting in the May 22 advance online edition of Nature Medicine, the Johns Hopkins team says it exploited the fact that when brain tissue is subjected to a stressful but not lethal insult a defense response occurs that protects cells from subsequent insult. The scientists dissected this preconditioning ...
More Americans praying about health, study says
2011-05-23
WASHINGTON – Praying about health issues dramatically increased among American adults over the past three decades, rising 36 percent between 1999 and 2007, according to a study published by the American Psychological Association.
Researchers analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's 1999, 2002 and 2007 National Health Interview Surveys for an article in the May issue of the APA journal Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. The study primarily focused on comparisons of results between the 2002 and 2007 surveys, which included, respectively, ...
HIV-infected donors present novel source of organs for HIV-infected transplant candidates
2011-05-23
A new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation reveals that HIV-infected deceased donors represent a potentially novel source of organs for HIV-infected transplant candidates that could decrease waitlist deaths and even shorten the national waitlist.
For patients with HIV, there is an increased chance of dying while awaiting transplantation, as the HIV itself causes the risk of dying on the waiting list to be higher. The option of deceased donors who were also infected with HIV could shorten this wait time. However, this is now illegal due to a 1988 ...
Chemical engineers at Stevens invent portable hydrogen reactor for fuel cells
2011-05-23
Chemical Engineering students at Stevens Institute of Technology are transforming the way that American soldiers power their battery-operated devices by making a small change: a really small change. Capitalizing on the unique properties of microscale systems, the students have invented a microreactor that converts everyday fossil fuels like propane and butane into pure hydrogen for fuel cell batteries. These batteries are not only highly efficient, but also can be replenished with hydrogen again and again for years of resilient performance in the field.
With batteries ...
Stevens biomedical engineering students fight hypothermia on the battlefield
2011-05-23
A Biomedical Engineering Senior Design team at Stevens Institute of Technology is working with the U.S. Army and New Jersey physicians to develop a new device to combat hypothermia among wounded soldiers.
Team "Heat Wave" is composed of seniors Walter Galvez, Amanda Mendez, Geoffrey Ng, and Dalia Shendi, in addition to Biomedical Engineering graduate student Maia Hadidi. The team's faculty advisor is Dr. Vikki Hazelwood and consulting physician is Dr. Herman Morchel from Hackensack University Medical Center. Additional expert support from industry and military was provided ...
Cheaper, greener, alternative energy storage at Stevens
2011-05-23
Every year, the world consumes 15 Terrawatts of power. Since the amount of annual harvestable solar energy has been estimated at 50 Terrawatts, students at Stevens Institute of Technology are working on a supercapacitor that will allow us to harness more of this renewable energy through biochar electrodes for supercapacitors, resulting in a cleaner, greener planet.
Supercapacitors are common today in solar panels and hydrogen fuel cell car batteries, but the material they use to store energy, activated carbon, is unsustainable and expensive. Biochar, on the other hand, ...
Once thought a rival phase, antiferromagnetism coexists with superconductivity
2011-05-23
High-temperature superconductivity can be looked at as a fight for survival at the atomic scale. In an effort to reach that point where electrons pair up and resistance is reduced to zero, superconductivity must compete with numerous, seemingly rival phases of matter.
Understanding those phases and whether or not they are rivals or complementary phenomena has consumed the attention of theoreticians and experimentalists in the quest to find superconducting materials capable of functioning at close-to-room temperature, a potential that has gone unrealized for nearly three ...
Tax Debt Due to Underreporting of Income? Blue Tax Can Help!
2011-05-23
When taxpayers underreport income, whether intentionally or accidentally, the IRS always catches up. And when they do, they want to get paid - and now.
Sandra (Delevan, NY) found herself in just this predicament when she came into the Blue Tax offices with an IRS tax liability of $3,636 due to a 2006 tax return filed with underreported income. The goal of the team at Blue Tax was getting this client on a payment arrangement that accurately reflected her income, resolving all of this in a timely manner.
First, Blue Tax met with the client and submitted their personal ...
Mummies tell history of a 'modern' plague
2011-05-23
Mummies from along the Nile are revealing how age-old irrigation techniques may have boosted the plague of schistosomiasis, a water-borne parasitic disease that infects an estimated 200 million people today.
An analysis of the mummies from Nubia, a former kingdom that was located in present-day Sudan, provides details for the first time about the prevalence of the disease across populations in ancient times, and how human alteration of the environment during that era may have contributed to its spread.
The American Journal of Physical Anthropology is publishing the ...
Mechanism behind compound's effects on skin inflammation and cancer progression
2011-05-23
Boston, MA - Charles J. Dimitroff, MS, PhD and colleagues in the Dimitroff Lab at Brigham and Women's Hospital, have developed a fluorinated analog of glucosamine, which, in a recent study, has been shown to block the synthesis of key carbohydrate structures linked to skin inflammation and cancer progression. These findings appear in the April 14, 2011, issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Dr. Dimitroff and colleagues show for the first time that the fluorinated glucosamine therapeutic works not through direct incorporation into growing sugar chains as previously ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New guidelines for managing blood cancers in pregnancy
New study suggests RNA present on surfaces of leaves may shape microbial communities
U.S. suffers from low social mobility. Is sprawl partly to blame?
Research spotlight: Improving predictions about brain cancer outcomes with the right imaging criteria
New UVA professor’s research may boost next-generation space rockets
Multilingualism improves crucial cognitive functions in autistic children
The carbon in our bodies probably left the galaxy and came back on cosmic ‘conveyer belt’
Scientists unveil surprising human vs mouse differences in a major cancer immunotherapy target
NASA’s LEXI will provide X-ray vision of Earth’s magnetosphere
A successful catalyst design for advanced zinc-iodine batteries
AMS Science Preview: Tall hurricanes, snow and wildfire
Study finds 25% of youth experienced homelessness in Denver in 2021, significantly higher than known counts
Integrated spin-wave quantum memory
Brain study challenges long-held views about Parkinson's movement disorders
Mental disorders among offspring prenatally exposed to systemic glucocorticoids
Trends in screening for social risk in physician practices
Exposure to school racial segregation and late-life cognitive outcomes
AI system helps doctors identify patients at risk for suicide
Advanced imaging uncovers hidden metastases in high-risk prostate cancer cases
Study reveals oldest-known evolutionary “arms race”
People find medical test results hard to understand, increasing overall worry
Mizzou researchers aim to reduce avoidable hospitalizations for nursing home residents with dementia
National Diabetes Prevention Program saves costs for enrollees
Research team to study critical aspects of Alzheimer’s and dementia healthcare delivery
Major breakthrough for ‘smart cell’ design
From CO2 to acetaldehyde: Towards greener industrial chemistry
Unlocking proteostasis: A new frontier in the fight against neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's
New nanocrystal material a key step toward faster, more energy-efficient computing
One of the world’s largest social programs greatly reduced tuberculosis among the most vulnerable
Surprising ‘two-faced’ cancer gene role supports paradigm shift in predicting disease
[Press-News.org] New research provides insight into how OCD developsStudy shows that compulsions lead to obsessions, and not the other way around