King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, London, England, United Kingdom.
J Anxiety Disord. 2011 Mar;25(2):192-202. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2010.09.002. Epub 2010 Sep 15.
Traumatic life events and early material deprivation have been identified as potential environmental risk factors for the development of pathological hoarding behavior, but the evidence so far is preliminary and confounded by the presence of comorbid obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This study retrospectively examined the occurrence of traumatic/stressful life events and material deprivation in four well-characterized groups: hoarding disorder without comorbid OCD (HD; n=24), hoarding disorder with comorbid OCD (HD+OCD; n=20), OCD without hoarding symptoms (OCD; n=17), and non-clinical controls (Control; n=20). Participants completed clinician and self-administered measures of hoarding, OCD, depression, psychological adjustment, and traumatic experience. Semi-structured interviews were undertaken to assess the temporal relation between traumatic/stressful life events and the onset and worsening of hoarding symptoms, and to determine the level of material deprivation. Although rates of post-traumatic stress disorder were comparable across all three clinical groups, hoarders (regardless of the presence of comorbid OCD) reported greater exposure to a range of traumatic and stressful life events compared to the two non-hoarding groups. Results remained unchanged after controlling for age, gender, education level, depression, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms. The total number of traumatic life events correlated significantly with the severity of hoarding but not of obsessive-compulsive symptoms. About half (52%) of hoarding individuals linked the onset of hoarding difficulties to stressful life circumstances, although this was significantly less common among those reporting early childhood onset of hoarding behavior. There was no link between levels of material deprivation and hoarding. Results support a link between trauma, life stress and hoarding, which may help to inform the conceptualization and treatment of hoarding disorder, but await confirmation in a representative epidemiological sample and using a longitudinal design.
创伤性生活事件和早期物质匮乏已被确定为病理性囤积行为发展的潜在环境风险因素,但迄今为止的证据尚不成熟,并且受到共病强迫症(OCD)的影响。本研究回顾性地检查了四个特征明确的组别中创伤/压力性生活事件和物质匮乏的发生情况:无共病强迫症的囤积障碍(HD;n=24)、有共病强迫症的囤积障碍(HD+OCD;n=20)、无囤积症状的强迫症(OCD;n=17)和非临床对照组(Control;n=20)。参与者完成了临床医生和自我管理的囤积、强迫症、抑郁、心理调整和创伤体验的评估。进行半结构化访谈以评估创伤/压力性生活事件与囤积症状的发生和恶化之间的时间关系,并确定物质匮乏的程度。尽管所有三个临床组的创伤后应激障碍发生率相当,但囤积者(无论是否共病强迫症)报告了更多的创伤和压力性生活事件暴露,与两个非囤积组相比。在控制年龄、性别、教育程度、抑郁和强迫症状后,结果仍然不变。创伤性生活事件的总数与囤积的严重程度显著相关,但与强迫症症状的严重程度无关。大约一半(52%)的囤积者将囤积困难的发生与压力生活环境联系起来,尽管那些报告早期囤积行为发生的人明显较少。物质匮乏的水平与囤积无关。研究结果支持创伤、生活压力和囤积之间的联系,这可能有助于深入了解囤积障碍的概念化和治疗,但需要在代表性的流行病学样本中并使用纵向设计进行证实。