| Literature DB >> 22033547 |
Andrea Allen1, Audrey King, Eric Hollander.
Abstract
The obsessive-compulsive spectrum is an important concept referring to a number of disorders drawn from several diagnostic categories that share core obsessive-compulsive features. These disorders can be grouped by the focus of their symptoms: bodily preoccupation, impulse control, or neurological disorders. Although the disorders are clearly distinct from one another, they have intriguing similarities in phenomenology, etiology, pathophysiology, patient characteristics, and treatment response. In combination with the knowledge gained through many years of research on obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), the concept of a spectrum has generated much fruitful research on the spectrum disorders. It has become apparent that these disorders can also be viewed as being on a continuum of compulsivity to impulsivity, characterized by harm avoidance at the compulsive end and risk seeking at the impulsive end. The compulsive and impulsive disorders differ in systematic ways that are just beginning to be understood. Here, we review these concepts and several representative obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders including both compulsive and impulsive disorders, as well as the three different symptom clusters: OCD, body dysmorphic disorder, pathological gambling, sexual compulsivity, and autism spectrum disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Asperger's disorder; autism; body dysmorphic disorder; impulsivity; obsessive-compulsive disorder; pathological gambling; sexual compulsivity
Year: 2003 PMID: 22033547 PMCID: PMC3181632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986
Obsessive-compulsive disorders.
| Bodily preoccupation | Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) |
| Hypochondriasis | |
| Eating disorders | |
| Depersonalization disorder | |
| Impulse control | Pathological gambling (PG) |
| Sexual compuisivity (SC) | |
| Kleptomania | |
| Trichotillomania | |
| Intermittent explosive disorder | |
| Borderline personality disorder | |
| Antisocial personality disorder | |
| Neurological disorders | Autism |
| Asperger disorder | |
| Tourette syndrome | |
| Sydenham chorea |