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Quality and temporal properties of premonitory urges in patients with skin picking disorder

Quality and temporal properties of premonitory urges in patients with skin picking disorder
Quality and temporal properties of premonitory urges in patients with skin picking disorder
Skin picking is a newly recognized obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorder in DSM-5. Similar to some repetitive behaviors in Gilles de la Tourette syndrome (GTS) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), premonitory urges are assumed to play a critical role in maintaining skin picking behavior, by creating a vicious cycle. The present study is the first to investigate the quality of premonitory urges, as well as the temporal relationship between urges and skin picking behavior in individuals with skin picking disorder. Quality and intensity of premonitory urges was assessed in 15 individuals with skin picking. Urge quality was assessed with the translated University of São Paulo Sensory Phenomena Scale (USP-SPS). Urge intensity was assessed continuously over 20 min using a computer-based tool. Participants were instructed either a) to pick freely or b) to suppress their skin picking behavior. Skin picking events during the free and suppression condition were recorded on video and coded manually. Regarding the types of urges, individuals with skin picking reported mainly physical urge sensations (80%), visual ”just-right” feelings (80%), and urge-only sensations (80%) similar to urges reported by GTS and OCD patients. Moreover, the data showed a strong temporal relationship between the intensity of premonitory urges and the emergence of skin picking behavior (R2 = .23) that was weakened when skin picking was suppressed (R2 = .06). The results suggest that skin picking behavior is maintained by premonitory urges and that this vicious cycle of negative reinforcement can be, at least partially, broken by suppressing skin picking behavior.
0010-9452
125-134
Dieringer, Meike
ec485a59-db8f-483f-b6d6-a3b7cdd88103
Beck, Christian
295b6a7f-13d4-4b89-8c70-d2c0ed8fc737
Verrel, Julius
59b40e11-7d99-4235-941a-1a6099cf6059
Muenchau, Alexander
2f74f3c9-3ecb-479b-9c34-9fe597f911c3
Zurowski, Bartosz
b29e36f4-014b-437a-abfc-9db27d4db145
Brandt, Valerie
e41f5832-70e4-407d-8a15-85b861761656
Dieringer, Meike
ec485a59-db8f-483f-b6d6-a3b7cdd88103
Beck, Christian
295b6a7f-13d4-4b89-8c70-d2c0ed8fc737
Verrel, Julius
59b40e11-7d99-4235-941a-1a6099cf6059
Muenchau, Alexander
2f74f3c9-3ecb-479b-9c34-9fe597f911c3
Zurowski, Bartosz
b29e36f4-014b-437a-abfc-9db27d4db145
Brandt, Valerie
e41f5832-70e4-407d-8a15-85b861761656

Dieringer, Meike, Beck, Christian, Verrel, Julius, Muenchau, Alexander, Zurowski, Bartosz and Brandt, Valerie (2019) Quality and temporal properties of premonitory urges in patients with skin picking disorder. Cortex, 121, 125-134. (doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2019.08.015).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Skin picking is a newly recognized obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorder in DSM-5. Similar to some repetitive behaviors in Gilles de la Tourette syndrome (GTS) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), premonitory urges are assumed to play a critical role in maintaining skin picking behavior, by creating a vicious cycle. The present study is the first to investigate the quality of premonitory urges, as well as the temporal relationship between urges and skin picking behavior in individuals with skin picking disorder. Quality and intensity of premonitory urges was assessed in 15 individuals with skin picking. Urge quality was assessed with the translated University of São Paulo Sensory Phenomena Scale (USP-SPS). Urge intensity was assessed continuously over 20 min using a computer-based tool. Participants were instructed either a) to pick freely or b) to suppress their skin picking behavior. Skin picking events during the free and suppression condition were recorded on video and coded manually. Regarding the types of urges, individuals with skin picking reported mainly physical urge sensations (80%), visual ”just-right” feelings (80%), and urge-only sensations (80%) similar to urges reported by GTS and OCD patients. Moreover, the data showed a strong temporal relationship between the intensity of premonitory urges and the emergence of skin picking behavior (R2 = .23) that was weakened when skin picking was suppressed (R2 = .06). The results suggest that skin picking behavior is maintained by premonitory urges and that this vicious cycle of negative reinforcement can be, at least partially, broken by suppressing skin picking behavior.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 August 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 September 2019
Published date: December 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 433979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433979
ISSN: 0010-9452
PURE UUID: c57a975f-4751-40e0-95f6-8e77ac8ca754

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 08:11

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Contributors

Author: Meike Dieringer
Author: Christian Beck
Author: Julius Verrel
Author: Alexander Muenchau
Author: Bartosz Zurowski
Author: Valerie Brandt

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