| Literature DB >> 33155153 |
Barbara Cludius1,2, Anna K Mannsfeld3, Alexander F Schmidt4, Lena Jelinek5.
Abstract
According to psychodynamic and cognitive models of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), anger and aggression play an important role in the development and maintenance of the disorder. (Sub-) clinical samples with OCD have reported higher anger and anger suppression. Patients with checking-related symptoms of OCD showed a less aggressive self-concept as assessed by an Implicit Association Test (IAT). This study assessed anger and aggressiveness self-concepts in OCD as well as possible mediators of the link between OCD and aggressiveness. A total of 48 patients with OCD and 45 healthy controls were included. Measures included the State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-II and an aggressiveness self-concept IAT (Agg-IAT). An inflated sense of responsibility, non-acceptance of emotions, and social desirability were tested as mediators. As expected, patients with OCD reported higher trait anger and anger suppression compared to healthy controls. Contrary to hypotheses, the aggressiveness self-concept (Agg-IAT) did not differ between groups. The inflated sense of responsibility mediated the relationship between group and anger suppression. Non-acceptance of negative emotions mediated the relationship between group and trait anger, as well as anger suppression. However, comorbidities and medication may account for some effect in anger suppression. Elevated trait anger and anger suppression in OCD patients could be explained by dysfunctional beliefs or maladaptive emotion regulation strategies. Emotion regulation therapy might help to enhance awareness and acceptance of emotions and possibly improve treatment outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Aggression; Anger; Emotion regulation; Implicit-association test; Mediation; Obsessive–compulsive disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33155153 PMCID: PMC8354876 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-020-01199-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Descriptive overview of demographics and dependent variables: mean (standard deviation)
| OCD patients ( | Healthy controls ( | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |||
| Age (years) | 32.46 (10.63) | 37.29 (14.28) | |
| Education (years) | 11.33 (1.58) | 11.93 (1.57) | |
| Sex (m/f) | 24/24 | 20/25 | |
| Verbal intelligence (WST, IQ) | 102.50 (12.65) | 106.24 (8.88) | |
| Social desirability (SES-17) | 8.90 (2.09)1 | 9.24 (1.96) | |
| Psychopathology | |||
| OCD symptoms (OCI-R total) | 23.32 (10.13)2 | 4.33 (5.76) | |
| OCD washing (OCI-R washing) | 4.49 (4.14)2 | 0.56 (1.22) | |
| OCD obsessing (OCI-R obsessing) | 7.45 (3.95)2 | 0.56 (0.92) | |
| OCD ordering (OCI-R ordering) | 3.77 (3.83)2 | 1.36 (1.92) | |
| OCD checking (OCI-R checking) | 5.36 (3.70)2 | 1.36 (2.19) | |
| OCD neutralizing (OCI-R neutralizing) | 2.25 (3.46)2 | 0.51 (1.10) | |
| Obsessive beliefs (OBQ-44 total) | 178.38 (58.15)2 | 103.62 (39.43) | |
| Responsibility/threat estimation (OBQ- RT) | 67.30 (26.09)2 | 40.60 (16.61)* | |
| Perfectionism/certainty (OBQ-PC) | 69.11 (23.66)2 | 39.67 (16.36) | |
| Importance/control of thoughts (OBQ-ICT) | 41.98 (18.67) 2 | 23.36 (11.27) | |
| Depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) | 13.38 (6.11)2 | 2.56 (2.23) | |
| Non-acceptance of emotional responses (DERS) | 18.47 (6.54)3 | 10.60 (4.85) | |
| Anger—direct measure | |||
| Trait anger (STAXI-2 trait subscale) | 22.36 (7.35) | 17.56 (4.22) | |
| Anger suppression (STAXI-2 anger expression-in subscale) | 18.23 (5.82) | 14.87 (5.12) | |
| Aggression (STAXI-2 anger expression-out subscale) | 13.02 (4.67) | 10.71 (2.26) | |
| Anger control (STAXI-2 anger control subscale) | 27.51 (6.05) | 29.96 (6.80) | |
| Aggressiveness—indirect measure | |||
| Aggressiveness self-concept ( | − 0.51 (0.37)4 | − 0.54 (0.33) | |
| Error rates (Agg-IAT) | 0.05 (0.03) | 0.05 (0.05) | |
m male, f female, OCD obsessive–compulsive disorder, WST test of word power, SES-17 social desirability scale, OCI-R obsessive–compulsive inventory revised, OBQ obsessive-beliefs questionnaire- 44, OBQ-RT responsibility and threat estimation subscale, OBQ-PC perfectionism and intolerance of uncertainty subscale, OBQ-ICT importance and control of thoughts subscale, PHQ-9 patient health questionnaire, DERS difficulty in emotion regulation questionnaire, STAXI-2 State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2, Agg-IAT Aggressiveness Self-Concept Implicit Association Test
1based on n = 31
2based on n = 47
3based on n = 30
4based on n = 41
Target and attribute stimuli used in the Agg-IAT
| Target stimuli | Attribute stimuli | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Me | Others | Peaceful | Aggressive |
| Me (mir) | Miller (Müller) | Talk (reden) | Hunt (jagen) |
| My (mein) | Miller (Müllerin) | Conciliation (Versöhnung) | Revenge (Rache) |
| Me (mich) | Shoemaker (Schuster) | Conversation (Gespräch) | Punch (Faustschlag) |
| I (ich) | Shoemaker (Schusterin) | Exchange (Austausch) | Fight (Kampf) |
| Self (selbst) | Navigator (Lotse) | Compromise (Kompromiss) | Hit (Schlagen) |
| Navigator (Lotsin) | Settlement (Einigung) | Avenge (rächen) | |
| Potter (Töpfer) | Agreement (Verständigung) | Retaliate (zurückschlagen) | |
| Potter (Töpferin) | Counseling (Beratung) | Threat (Drohung) | |
| Farmer (Bauer) | Agree (einigen) | Attack (Angriff) | |
| Farmer (Bäuerin) | Concede (nachgeben) | Beat (hauen) | |
The “others” stimuli were presented in both a female and a male version. The German version of the stimuli is listed in parentheses
Overview of blocks presented in the Agg-IAT
| Block number | Block name | Number of trails |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Practice attribute categories: aggressive vs. peaceful | 20 Trials |
| 2 | Practice target categories: me vs. others | 20 Trials |
| 3* | Test Incompatible: me + aggressive vs. others + peaceful | 84 Trials |
| 4 | Practice attribute categories: peaceful vs. aggressive | 20 Trials |
| 5* | Test Compatible: me + peaceful vs. others + aggressive | 84 Trials |
Blocks 3 and 5 are the critical blocks (the first four trials were used as practice blocks and were thus discarded from the analyses)
Fig. 1We computed three parallel mediation models with group (OCD, healthy) as predictor (X) and an inflated sense of responsibility (OBQ-RT subscale of the OBQ-44), non-acceptance of negative emotions (DERS), and social desirability (SES-17) as mediators to control for the inter-correlation between the three mediators. The dependent variables (Y) for these models were (1) aggressiveness self-concept (Agg-IAT), (2) trait anger (STAXI-2 trait subscale), and (3) anger suppression (STAXI-2 anger expression-in subscale). a = effect of independent variable on mediator, b = effect of mediator on outcome, c′ = effect of group on outcome when controlling for the mediator
Zero-order correlations between focal variables from the mediation analyses
| Measure | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Group (OCD, healthy) | – | − 0.52** | 0.08 | − 0.57** | − 0.05 | − 0.37** | − 0.30** |
| 2. Responsibility (OBQ-RT) | – | 0.03 | 0.63** | − 0.08 | 0.36** | 0.50** | |
| 3. Social desirability (SES-17) | – | − 0.04 | − 0.13 | − 0.22 | − 0.20 | ||
| 4. Non-acceptance of emotions (DERS) | – | − 0.08 | 0.59** | 0.61** | |||
| 5. Aggressiveness self-concept (Agg-IAT) | – | − 0.13 | − 0.05 | ||||
| 6. Trait anger (STAXI-II trait anger) | – | 0.46** | |||||
| 7. Anger suppression (STAXI-II anger-in) | – |
OBQ-RT responsibility and threat estimation subscale of OBQ-44, SES-17 Social Desirability Scale, DERS difficulty in emotion regulation questionnaire, Agg-IAT aggressiveness Implicit Association Test, STAXI-2 State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2
**p < 0.01
Mediation analyses with age and gender as covariates
| Independent variable (IV) | Dependent variable (DV) | Mediator (M) | Effect of IV on M (a); | Effect of M on DV (b); | Indirect effect (ab); | Direct effect (c′); | Total effect (c); |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In the whole sample (OCD, healthy) | |||||||
| Group | Agg-IAT | OBQ-RT | − 0.00, (0.00), − 0.49, 0.62 | − 0.03 [− 0.16; 0.09] | 0.07 (0.10), 0.70, 0.48 | − 0.05 [− 0.06; 0.07] | |
| SES | − 0.44 (0.49), − 0.91, .37 | − 0.03 (0.02), − 1.44, 0.15 | 0.01 [− 0.02; 0.05] | 0.07 (0.10), 0.70, 0.48 | − 0.05 [− 0.06; 0.07] | ||
| DERS | − 0.00, (0.01), − 0.58, 0.56 | − 0.04 [− 0.16; 0.08] | 0.07 (0.10), 0.70, 0.48 | − 0.05 [− 0.06; 0.07] | |||
| Group | Trait anger | OBQ-RT | 0.02 (0.03), 0.60, 0.55 | 0.56 [− 1.71; 2.77] | 0.89 (1.62), 0.55, 0.58 | ||
| SES | − 0.44 (0.49), − 0.91, 0.37 | − 0.58 (0.30), − 1.88, 0.06 | 0.26 [− 0.35;1.02] | 0.89 (1.62), 0.55, 0.58 | |||
| DERS | 0.89 (1.62), 0.55, 0.58 | ||||||
| Group | Anger suppression | OBQ-RT | 0.91 (1.38), 0.66, 0.51 | ||||
| SES | − 0.44 (0.49), − 0.91, 0.37 | − 0.51 (0.26), − 1.94, 0.06 | 0.22 [− 0.24; 1.02] | 0.91 (1.38), 0.66, 0.51 | |||
| DERS | − 0.91 (1.38), 0.66, 0.51 | ||||||
IV independent variable, DV dependent variable, M mediator, a effect of independent variable on mediator, b effect of mediator on outcome, BC CI bootstrap-corrected confidence interval (based on 10,000 samples), c total effect of the independent variable on outcome (without the influence of the mediator in the model), c′ effect of group on outcome when controlling for the mediator, OCD obsessive–compulsive disorder, Agg-IAT aggressiveness implicit association test, Trait anger State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2 trait subscale, A Anger suppression State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2 anger-in subscale, OCI-R Obsessive–Compulsive Inventory Revised, OBQ—RT responsibility and threat estimation subscale of the Obsessive-Beliefs Questionnaire- 44, Y-BOCS Yale-Brown obsessive compulsive scale
Significant results are in bold