A neuropsychological comparison of obsessive-compulsive disorder and trichotillomania
A neuropsychological comparison of obsessive-compulsive disorder and trichotillomania
Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and trichotillomania (compulsive hair-pulling) share overlapping co-morbidity, familial transmission, and phenomenology. However, the extent to which these disorders share a common cognitive phenotype has yet to be elucidated using patients without confounding co-morbidities.
Aim: To compare neurocognitive functioning in co-morbidity-free patients with OCD and trichotillomania, focusing on domains of learning and memory, executive function, affective processing, reflection-impulsivity and decision-making.
Method: Twenty patients with OCD, 20 patients with trichotillomania, and 20 matched controls undertook neuropsychological assessment after meeting stringent inclusion criteria.
Results: Groups were matched for age, education, verbal IQ, and gender. The OCD and trichotillomania groups were impaired on spatial working memory. Only OCD patients showed additional impairments on executive planning and visual pattern recognition memory, and missed more responses to sad target words than other groups on an affective go/no-go task. Furthermore, OCD patients failed to modulate their behaviour between conditions on the reflection-impulsivity test, suggestive of cognitive inflexibility. Both clinical groups showed intact decision-making and probabilistic reversal learning.
Conclusions: OCD and trichotillomania shared overlapping spatial working memory problems, but neuropsychological dysfunction in OCD spanned additional domains that were intact in trichotillomania. Findings are discussed in relation to likely fronto-striatal neural substrates and future research directions.
Cognition, Compulsive, Fronto-striatal, Impulsive, Obsessive, Spectrum, Strategy
654-662
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Fineberg, Naomi A.
157dcac1-9fb2-4197-81f3-0167e1224f05
Blackwell, Andrew D.
1866c337-e426-424a-bbf9-aeb2d962f0aa
Clark, Luke
d0d03564-0462-4056-ab19-b511acc1321b
Robbins, Trevor W.
20dd57dd-dbf3-4aaa-b7ba-bb4387ffcbc7
Sahakian, Barbara J.
e689cd5c-b84f-4503-86ca-7526cf340121
2007
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Fineberg, Naomi A.
157dcac1-9fb2-4197-81f3-0167e1224f05
Blackwell, Andrew D.
1866c337-e426-424a-bbf9-aeb2d962f0aa
Clark, Luke
d0d03564-0462-4056-ab19-b511acc1321b
Robbins, Trevor W.
20dd57dd-dbf3-4aaa-b7ba-bb4387ffcbc7
Sahakian, Barbara J.
e689cd5c-b84f-4503-86ca-7526cf340121
Chamberlain, Samuel R., Fineberg, Naomi A., Blackwell, Andrew D., Clark, Luke, Robbins, Trevor W. and Sahakian, Barbara J.
(2007)
A neuropsychological comparison of obsessive-compulsive disorder and trichotillomania.
Neuropsychologia, 45 (4), .
(doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.07.016).
Abstract
Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and trichotillomania (compulsive hair-pulling) share overlapping co-morbidity, familial transmission, and phenomenology. However, the extent to which these disorders share a common cognitive phenotype has yet to be elucidated using patients without confounding co-morbidities.
Aim: To compare neurocognitive functioning in co-morbidity-free patients with OCD and trichotillomania, focusing on domains of learning and memory, executive function, affective processing, reflection-impulsivity and decision-making.
Method: Twenty patients with OCD, 20 patients with trichotillomania, and 20 matched controls undertook neuropsychological assessment after meeting stringent inclusion criteria.
Results: Groups were matched for age, education, verbal IQ, and gender. The OCD and trichotillomania groups were impaired on spatial working memory. Only OCD patients showed additional impairments on executive planning and visual pattern recognition memory, and missed more responses to sad target words than other groups on an affective go/no-go task. Furthermore, OCD patients failed to modulate their behaviour between conditions on the reflection-impulsivity test, suggestive of cognitive inflexibility. Both clinical groups showed intact decision-making and probabilistic reversal learning.
Conclusions: OCD and trichotillomania shared overlapping spatial working memory problems, but neuropsychological dysfunction in OCD spanned additional domains that were intact in trichotillomania. Findings are discussed in relation to likely fronto-striatal neural substrates and future research directions.
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Published date: 2007
Keywords:
Cognition, Compulsive, Fronto-striatal, Impulsive, Obsessive, Spectrum, Strategy
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Local EPrints ID: 493075
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493075
ISSN: 0028-3932
PURE UUID: 47abfc4c-2120-496e-98cb-fb4f50681a38
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Date deposited: 22 Aug 2024 16:56
Last modified: 23 Aug 2024 01:59
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Contributors
Author:
Samuel R. Chamberlain
Author:
Naomi A. Fineberg
Author:
Andrew D. Blackwell
Author:
Luke Clark
Author:
Trevor W. Robbins
Author:
Barbara J. Sahakian
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