aetiology and pathogenesis
Last reviewed 01/2018
A genetic predisposition is likely based on twin and genome-wide linkage studies.
- twin studies which group OCD with obsessive personality show concordance rates as high as 87% in monozygotic twins and 47% in dizygotic twins
The following risk factors may be associated with development of OCD:
- developmental factors
- emotional, physical, and sexual abuse
- neglect
- social isolation
- teasing
- bullying
- psychological factors
- over-inflated sense of responsibility
- magical thinking
- an intolerance of uncertainty
- a belief in the controllability of intrusive thoughts
- stressors
- pregnancy
- postnatal period
Rarely
- in adults OCD symptoms can be a consequence of certain neurological conditions such as a brain tumour, Sydenham’s chorea, Huntington’s chorea, or frontotemporal dementia or as a complication of brain injury to the frontal lobe or basal skull
- in children it is associated with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections (PANDAS) in which they develop an abrupt onset of OCD symptoms or tics after infection with group A Streptococcus (1,2)
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