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强迫症

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

作者信息

Brock Hannah, Rizvi Abid, Hany Manassa

机构信息

University Hospital

West Virginia University, William R Sharpe Jr Hospital

Abstract

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a disabling condition estimated to affect 1% to 3% of individuals throughout their lifetime. This psychiatric disorder is characterized by obsessions and compulsions, which consume a significant amount of time and lead to notable distress and impairment. Obsessions refer to intrusive and repetitive thoughts, urges, or mental images that are challenging to control. These thoughts often lack a clear purpose and are accompanied by distress. Compulsions involve repetitive actions or mental events that individuals with OCD feel compelled to perform to alleviate the distress caused by the obsessions or to prevent a feared consequence from occurring. Additionally, individuals with OCD may also engage in avoidance behaviors of obsession-triggering situations. OCD is a heterogeneous condition that arises from a complex interplay of genetic and environmental risk factors. Most adults are distressed by the ego-dystonic nature of their obsessions and are aware that their compulsive behaviors are abnormally excessive. Children often have difficulty describing their obsessions. In OCD patients, common obsessions and their associated compulsive behaviors include fear of contamination leading to excessive cleaning, fear of harm linked to repetitive checking of security measures, intrusive, aggressive, or sexual thoughts paired with mental rituals, and a focus on symmetry accompanied by ordering or counting. Though hoarding behaviors are usually specific to hoarding disorder, they can occur in OCD to prevent perceived harm. These behavior sets are consistently observed worldwide, suggesting a degree of commonality in OCD symptom dimensions. OCD can also present with rarer symptoms, including scrupulosity, obsessive jealousy, and musical obsessions. The understanding of OCD has evolved significantly over time. Historically framed in religious terms as a moral failing or demonic possession, OCD was first medically described by Esquirol. Freud subsequently characterized the condition using the term , positing that OCD originated with a regression in the anal phase of psychosexual development. In the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-III), OCD was grouped with phobias under a single diagnosis. Later, the DSM-IV classified the condition as an anxiety disorder. The DSM-5 has reclassified OCD into the category "Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders," alongside conditions like hoarding and body dysmorphia. This reclassification acknowledges shared characteristics, such as phenomenology, comorbidity, and underlying neurobiological factors. WHO lists OCD as 1 of the 10 most disabling conditions caused by financial loss and decreased quality of life. In The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders fifth edition Text Revision (DSM-5 TR), which was published by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) in 2022, OCD sits under the category of owhere the following subcategories were placed: OCD. Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). Hoarding disorder. Trichotillomania. Excoriation (ie, skin-picking) disorder. Substance or medication-induced obsessive-compulsive and related disorder. Obsessive-compulsive and related disorder as a result of another medical condition. Other specified obsessive-compulsive and related disorder. Unspecified obsessive-compulsive and related disorder. The diagnosis of OCD is based on clinical assessment determining whether the DSM-5 TR criteria are met, which specify that either obsessions or compulsions must be present, the behaviors must be time-consuming, taking ≥1 hour per day, and significantly disrupting daily life. (Refer to the  section for more information on the diagnostic criteria for OCD).

摘要

强迫症(OCD)是一种致残性疾病,据估计,一生中会影响1%至3%的人。这种精神疾病的特征是强迫观念和强迫行为,它们会消耗大量时间,并导致明显的痛苦和功能障碍。强迫观念是指难以控制的侵入性和重复性思维、冲动或心理意象。这些思维往往缺乏明确目的,并伴有痛苦。强迫行为包括重复性动作或心理活动,强迫症患者感到不得不进行这些行为,以减轻强迫观念引起的痛苦或防止可怕后果的发生。此外,强迫症患者还可能会回避引发强迫观念的情境。强迫症是一种异质性疾病,由遗传和环境风险因素的复杂相互作用引起。大多数成年人因强迫观念的自我不协调性质而感到痛苦,并意识到他们的强迫行为异常过度。儿童往往难以描述他们的强迫观念。在强迫症患者中,常见的强迫观念及其相关的强迫行为包括:对污染的恐惧导致过度清洁;对伤害的恐惧与反复检查安全措施有关;侵入性、攻击性或性方面的思维与心理仪式相伴;对对称的关注伴随着排序或计数。虽然囤积行为通常是囤积障碍所特有的,但它们也可能出现在强迫症中,以防止感知到的伤害。这些行为模式在全球范围内都有一致的观察结果,表明强迫症症状维度存在一定程度的共性。强迫症也可能表现出更罕见的症状,包括过度谨慎、强迫性嫉妒和音乐强迫观念。随着时间的推移,对强迫症的理解有了显著的发展。历史上,强迫症被用宗教术语描述为道德缺陷或被恶魔附身,它最早由埃斯屈罗尔进行医学描述。弗洛伊德随后用“肛门期退行”一词来描述这种疾病,认为强迫症起源于性心理发展的肛门期退行。在《诊断与统计手册》第三版(DSM-III)中,强迫症与恐惧症被归为单一诊断类别。后来,《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)将该疾病归类为焦虑障碍。《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-5)已将强迫症重新归类为“强迫及相关障碍”类别,与囤积症和躯体变形障碍等疾病并列。这种重新分类承认了它们在现象学、共病性和潜在神经生物学因素等方面的共同特征。世界卫生组织将强迫症列为因经济损失和生活质量下降导致的10种最致残疾病之一。在美国精神病学协会(APA)2022年出版的《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版修订本(DSM-5 TR)中,强迫症属于以下类别:强迫症。躯体变形障碍(BDD)。囤积障碍。拔毛癖。皮肤搔抓(即抠皮)障碍。物质/药物所致的强迫及相关障碍。由其他躯体疾病所致的强迫及相关障碍。其他特定的强迫及相关障碍。未特定的强迫及相关障碍。强迫症的诊断基于临床评估,确定是否符合DSM-5 TR标准,该标准规定必须存在强迫观念或强迫行为,这些行为必须耗时,每天≥1小时,并严重扰乱日常生活。(有关强迫症诊断标准的更多信息,请参阅 部分)

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