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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder |
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Obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD, involves anxious thoughts or
rituals you feel you can't control. If you have OCD, you may be
plagued by persistent, unwelcome thoughts or images, or by the
urgent need to engage in certain rituals.
You may be obsessed with germs or dirt, so you wash your hands over
and over. You may be filled with doubt and feel the need to check
things repeatedly. You may have frequent thoughts of violence, and
fear that you will harm people close to you. You may spend long
periods touching things or counting; you may be pre-occupied by
order or symmetry; you may have persistent thoughts of performing
sexual acts that are repugnant to you; or you may be troubled by
thoughts that are against your religious beliefs.
The disturbing thoughts or images are called obsessions, and the
rituals that are performed to try to prevent or get rid of them are
called compulsions. There is no pleasure in carrying out the rituals
you are drawn to, only temporary relief from the anxiety that grows
when you don't perform them.
A lot of healthy people can identify with some of the symptoms of
OCD, such as checking the stove several times before leaving the
house. But for people with OCD, such activities consume at least an
hour a day, are very distressing, and interfere with daily life.
Most adults with this condition recognize that what they're doing is
senseless, but they can't stop it. Some people, though, particularly
children with OCD, may not realize that their behavior is out of the
ordinary.
OCD afflicts about 3.3 million adult Americans. It strikes men and
women in approximately equal numbers and usually first appears in
childhood, adolescence, or early adulthood.2
One-third of adults with OCD report having experienced their first
symptoms as children. The course of the disease is variable—symptoms
may come and go, they may ease over time, or they can grow
progressively worse. Research evidence suggests that OCD might run
in families.3
Depression or other anxiety disorders may accompany OCD and some
people with OCD also have eating disorders.6
In addition, people with OCD may avoid situations in which they
might have to confront their obsessions, or they may try
unsuccessfully to use alcohol or drugs to calm themselves. If OCD
grows severe enough, it can keep someone from holding down a job or
from carrying out normal responsibilities at home.
OCD generally responds well to treatment with medications or
carefully targeted psychotherapy.
The disturbing thoughts or images are called obsessions, and the
rituals performed to try to prevent or get rid of them are called
compulsions. There is no pleasure in carrying out the rituals you
are drawn to, only temporary relief from the anxiety that grows when
you don't perform them.
(Source NIMH)

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