Departments of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2010 Aug;71(8):1061-8. doi: 10.4088/JCP.09m05381blu. Epub 2010 May 18.
The primary goal of this study was to examine the impact of pregnancy, childbirth, and menstruation on the onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and/or exacerbation of OCD symptoms.
One hundred twenty-six women aged between 18 and 69 years attending a university-based OCD clinic who met DSM-IV criteria for OCD according to the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Disorders were interviewed retrospectively to assess OCD onset and symptom exacerbation in relationship to reproductive events. Women were placed into 2 groups: those who had ever been pregnant (ever pregnant group) and those who had never been pregnant. The ever pregnant group was further subdivided into those who reported onset of OCD in the perinatal period (perinatal-related group) and those who denied onset related to pregnancy (nonperinatal-related group). Between-group comparisons were done using a Student t test for continuous measures, and categorical variables were assessed using the χ² test.
Of the 78 women in the ever pregnant group, 32.1% (n = 24) had OCD onset in the perinatal period (perinatal-related group), 15.4% in pregnancy, 14.1% at postpartum, and 1.3% after miscarriage. Of 132 total pregnancies, 34.1% involved an exacerbation of symptoms, 22.0% involved an improvement in OCD symptoms, and 43.9% did not change symptom severity in women with preexisting illness. Women in the perinatal-related group and women with perinatal worsening of preexisting OCD were more likely to have premenstrual worsening of OCD symptoms compared to women in the nonperinatal-related group (66% vs 39%, P = .047).
Findings from this study provide additional evidence that pregnancy and childbirth are frequently associated with the onset of OCD or worsening of symptoms in those with preexisting disorder. In addition, there appears to be continuity between OCD onset and/or exacerbation across the reproductive life cycle, at least with menstruation and pregnancy.
本研究的主要目的是探讨妊娠、分娩和月经对强迫症(OCD)发病和/或 OCD 症状恶化的影响。
126 名年龄在 18 至 69 岁之间的女性在大学 OCD 诊所就诊,她们根据 DSM-IV 障碍的结构临床访谈符合 OCD 的 DSM-IV 标准。对这些女性进行回顾性访谈,以评估生殖事件与 OCD 发病和症状恶化的关系。这些女性被分为两组:曾怀孕过的(曾怀孕组)和从未怀孕过的。曾怀孕组进一步分为围产期发病的(围产期相关组)和否认与妊娠相关发病的(非围产期相关组)。采用 t 检验比较连续变量,采用 χ²检验比较分类变量。
在曾怀孕的 78 名女性中,32.1%(n=24)在围产期发病(围产期相关组),15.4%在妊娠期间,14.1%在产后,1.3%在流产后。在 132 例妊娠中,34.1%使症状恶化,22.0%使 OCD 症状改善,43.9%在有既往疾病的女性中未改变症状严重程度。与非围产期相关组相比,围产期相关组和围产期 OCD 恶化的女性更有可能出现经前期 OCD 症状恶化(66%比 39%,P=.047)。
本研究结果进一步提供了证据,表明妊娠和分娩常与已有障碍的 OCD 发病或症状恶化有关。此外,在生殖生命周期中,至少与月经和妊娠有关,OCD 的发病和/或恶化似乎具有连续性。