Barahona-Corrêa J Bernardo, Camacho Marta, Castro-Rodrigues Pedro, Costa Rui, Oliveira-Maia Albino J
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Nova Medical School , Lisbon, Portugal ; Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Ocidental , Lisbon, Portugal ; Champalimaud Clinical Centre, Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown , Lisbon, Portugal ; Centro de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento Infantil , Cascais, Portugal.
Champalimaud Clinical Centre, Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown , Lisbon, Portugal.
Front Psychol. 2015 Nov 23;6:1798. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01798. eCollection 2015.
The understanding of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has evolved with the knowledge of behavior, the brain, and their relationship. Modern views of OCD as a neuropsychiatric disorder originated from early lesion studies, with more recent models incorporating detailed neuropsychological findings, such as perseveration in set-shifting tasks, and findings of altered brain structure and function, namely of orbitofrontal corticostriatal circuits and their limbic connections. Interestingly, as neurobiological models of OCD evolved from cortical and cognitive to sub-cortical and behavioral, the focus of OCD phenomenology also moved from thought control and contents to new concepts rooted in animal models of action control. Most recently, the proposed analogy between habitual action control and compulsive behavior has led to the hypothesis that individuals suffering from OCD may be predisposed to rely excessively on habitual rather than on goal-directed behavioral strategies. Alternatively, compulsions have been proposed to result either from hyper-valuation of certain actions and/or their outcomes, or from excessive uncertainty in the monitoring of action performance, both leading to perseveration in prepotent actions such as washing or checking. In short, the last decades have witnessed a formidable renovation in the pathophysiology, phenomenology, and even semantics, of OCD. Nevertheless, such progress is challenged by several caveats, not least psychopathological oversimplification and overgeneralization of animal to human extrapolations. Here we present an historical overview of the understanding of OCD, highlighting converging studies and trends in neuroscience, psychiatry and neuropsychology, and how they influenced current perspectives on the nosology and phenomenology of this disorder.
随着对行为、大脑及其关系的认识不断发展,人们对强迫症(OCD)的理解也在演变。现代将强迫症视为一种神经精神疾病的观点起源于早期的损伤研究,而最近的模型纳入了详细的神经心理学发现,如在任务转换中的持续现象,以及大脑结构和功能改变的发现,即眶额皮质纹状体回路及其边缘连接的改变。有趣的是,随着强迫症的神经生物学模型从皮质和认知层面发展到皮质下和行为层面,强迫症现象学的焦点也从思维控制和内容转移到了基于动物行动控制模型的新概念上。最近,关于习惯性行动控制和强迫行为之间的类比提出了一个假说,即患有强迫症的个体可能倾向于过度依赖习惯性而非目标导向的行为策略。或者,有人提出强迫行为要么是由于对某些行为和/或其结果的过度重视,要么是由于在行动表现监测中的过度不确定性,这两者都会导致在诸如洗涤或检查等优势行为中持续进行。简而言之,在过去几十年里,强迫症在病理生理学、现象学甚至语义学方面都经历了巨大的革新。然而,这样的进展受到了一些限制的挑战,尤其是精神病理学的过度简化以及将动物研究结果过度推广到人类身上。在这里,我们对强迫症的理解进行历史概述,强调神经科学、精神病学和神经心理学中的趋同研究和趋势,以及它们如何影响了当前对这种疾病的分类学和现象学的看法。