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Neurobiology of Subtypes of Trichotillomania and Skin Picking Disorder

Neurobiology of Subtypes of Trichotillomania and Skin Picking Disorder
Neurobiology of Subtypes of Trichotillomania and Skin Picking Disorder
Objective: Trichotillomania and skin picking disorder are common and often debilitating mental health conditions, grouped under the umbrella term of body focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs). Recent clinical subtyping found that there were three distinct subtypes of trichotillomania and two of skin picking disorder. Whether these clinical subtypes map on to any unique neurobiological underpinnings however remains unknown.
Methods: 251 adults (193 with a BFRB [85.5% (n=165) female] and 58 healthy controls [77.6% (n=45) female]) were recruited from the community for a multi-center between-group comparison using structural neuroimaging. Differences in whole brain structure were compared across the subtypes of BFRBs, controlling for age, sex, scanning site and intracranial volume.
Results: When the subtypes of TTM were compared, low awareness hair pullers demonstrated increased cortical volume in the lateral occipital lobe relative to controls and sensory sensitive pullers. In addition, impulsive/perfectionist hair pullers showed relative decreased volume near the lingual gyrus of the inferior occipital-parietal lobe compared to controls.
Conclusions: These data indicate that the anatomical substrates of particular forms of BFRBs are dissociable, which may have implications for understanding clinical presentations and treatment response.
Imaging, Neurobiology, Skin picking disorder, Subtypes, Trichotillomania
1092-8529
1-20
Grant, Jon E
68b74bfc-0910-4325-aa34-24d285abfc19
Bethlehem, Richard A I
3ab67633-bcc8-47fa-9341-786fcd24ec76
Chamberlain, Samuel R
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Peris, Tara S
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Ricketts, Emily J
b573106f-ac72-47c6-b899-5d6c8b08647e
O'Neill, Joseph
f40d28af-be7d-40ec-8006-8235bfd43997
Dougherty, Darin D
4f7d89a3-70ea-477f-95ae-a1d028811191
Stein, Dan
81ae9dac-89c4-446a-bda0-73d12749be45
Lochner, Christine
554eb8d3-d922-489a-ade0-4d92e60196a8
Woods, Douglas W
cc962e75-3658-441d-beff-ba7e0a852a43
Piacentini, John
54968ef8-87c1-43a7-b7ec-a3c4186cd46e
Keuthen, Nancy J
3aac6a61-b2e2-4870-9762-a16a52227dda
Grant, Jon E
68b74bfc-0910-4325-aa34-24d285abfc19
Bethlehem, Richard A I
3ab67633-bcc8-47fa-9341-786fcd24ec76
Chamberlain, Samuel R
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Peris, Tara S
05ca7c10-65fa-4771-859f-4cfe86a9a135
Ricketts, Emily J
b573106f-ac72-47c6-b899-5d6c8b08647e
O'Neill, Joseph
f40d28af-be7d-40ec-8006-8235bfd43997
Dougherty, Darin D
4f7d89a3-70ea-477f-95ae-a1d028811191
Stein, Dan
81ae9dac-89c4-446a-bda0-73d12749be45
Lochner, Christine
554eb8d3-d922-489a-ade0-4d92e60196a8
Woods, Douglas W
cc962e75-3658-441d-beff-ba7e0a852a43
Piacentini, John
54968ef8-87c1-43a7-b7ec-a3c4186cd46e
Keuthen, Nancy J
3aac6a61-b2e2-4870-9762-a16a52227dda

Grant, Jon E, Bethlehem, Richard A I, Chamberlain, Samuel R, Peris, Tara S, Ricketts, Emily J, O'Neill, Joseph, Dougherty, Darin D, Stein, Dan, Lochner, Christine, Woods, Douglas W, Piacentini, John and Keuthen, Nancy J (2021) Neurobiology of Subtypes of Trichotillomania and Skin Picking Disorder. CNS Spectrums, 1-20. (doi:10.1017/S109285292100095X).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: Trichotillomania and skin picking disorder are common and often debilitating mental health conditions, grouped under the umbrella term of body focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs). Recent clinical subtyping found that there were three distinct subtypes of trichotillomania and two of skin picking disorder. Whether these clinical subtypes map on to any unique neurobiological underpinnings however remains unknown.
Methods: 251 adults (193 with a BFRB [85.5% (n=165) female] and 58 healthy controls [77.6% (n=45) female]) were recruited from the community for a multi-center between-group comparison using structural neuroimaging. Differences in whole brain structure were compared across the subtypes of BFRBs, controlling for age, sex, scanning site and intracranial volume.
Results: When the subtypes of TTM were compared, low awareness hair pullers demonstrated increased cortical volume in the lateral occipital lobe relative to controls and sensory sensitive pullers. In addition, impulsive/perfectionist hair pullers showed relative decreased volume near the lingual gyrus of the inferior occipital-parietal lobe compared to controls.
Conclusions: These data indicate that the anatomical substrates of particular forms of BFRBs are dissociable, which may have implications for understanding clinical presentations and treatment response.

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BPM-imaging and subtypes-7-19-21 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 November 2021
Published date: 3 November 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Imaging, Neurobiology, Skin picking disorder, Subtypes, Trichotillomania

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452742
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452742
ISSN: 1092-8529
PURE UUID: ec9c68ed-38d8-4545-9f3d-243772eecb16
ORCID for Samuel R Chamberlain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7014-8121

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2021 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:03

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Contributors

Author: Jon E Grant
Author: Richard A I Bethlehem
Author: Samuel R Chamberlain ORCID iD
Author: Tara S Peris
Author: Emily J Ricketts
Author: Joseph O'Neill
Author: Darin D Dougherty
Author: Dan Stein
Author: Christine Lochner
Author: Douglas W Woods
Author: John Piacentini
Author: Nancy J Keuthen

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