Journal Article10.1007/S10608-011-9404-9
Initial Data Characterizing the Progression from Obsessions and Compulsions to Full-Blown Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
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TL;DR: Pinto et al. as discussed by the authors found that generalized anxiety, perfectionism, impaired work or school performance, social isolation, preoccupation with details and intolerance of uncertainty, frequently emerged after their initial OCD symptoms but before full-criteria for OCD were met.
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Abstract: Most individuals who develop obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) experience years of obsessions and/or compulsions preceding onset of the full-blown disorder (Angst in Current insights in obsessive compulsive disorder, Wiley, Chirchester, New York, Brisbane, 1994; Coles et al. in Behav Cogn Psychother 11:1–11, 2011; Pinto et al. in J Clin Psychiatry 67(5):703–711, 2006). However, little is known about experiences during this period and about factors that are involved in the generation of interference or distress that signals the onset of diagnosable OCD. Therefore, the current study was designed to provide data on the characteristics of the symptom phase of OCD and potential markers of the transition from symptoms to the full-blown disorder. Individuals that eventually developed full-blown OCD retrospectively reported that generalized anxiety, perfectionism, impaired work or school performance, social isolation, preoccupation with details and intolerance of uncertainty, frequently emerged after their initial OC symptoms but before full-criteria for OCD were met. Increases in stress level, the desire for things to feel ‘just right’, and the amount of attention paid to one’s thoughts were perceived as having played an important role in the transition to OCD. Additional data and theory development regarding the progression from symptoms to OCD is warranted.
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Citations
Examining an obsessive-compulsive core dimensions model: Structural validity of harm avoidance and incompleteness
TL;DR: The authors investigated the structural validity of harm avoidance and incompleteness as symptom-specific motivations for clinical OCD symptoms and stylistic traits in the non-clinical population, and found evidence of the model's method invariance.
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Intolerance of uncertainty, not just right experiences, and compulsive checking: Test of a moderated mediation model on a non-clinical sample.
TL;DR: It is highlighted thatNJREs were a mediator of the relationship between IU and checking behaviors; nonetheless, in connection with medium levels of IU, NJREs no longer mediated the path and IU did not emerge to moderate the mediation.
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The speed of progression towards obsessive-compulsive disorder
Emma M. Thompson,Albina Rodrigues Torres,Lucy Albertella,Ygor Arzeno Ferrão,Jeggan Tiego,Roseli G. Shavitt,Maria Conceição do Rosário,Euripedes Constantino Miguel,Leonardo F. Fontenelle,Leonardo F. Fontenelle +9 more
TL;DR: Faster OCD onset was associated with lower age at the time of assessment, male gender, being in new romantic states as precipitants for compulsions, greater severity of sexual/religious symptoms and lower severity of hoarding and YBOCS compulsions severity scores.
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Fathers' “not just right experiences” predict obsessive–compulsive symptoms in their sons: Family study of a non-clinical Italian sample.
Claudio Sica,Corrado Caudek,Gioia Bottesi,Eleonora De Fazio,Marta Ghisi,Igor Marchetti,Antonella Orsucci +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a series of hierarchical multiple regression analyses showed that fathers' "not just right experiences" (NJREs) predicted OCD symptomatology in their sons even when parents' anxiety symptoms and their level of OC-related beliefs were controlled.
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“Not Just Right Experiences” as a psychological endophenotype for obsessive-compulsive disorder: Evidence from an Italian family study
TL;DR: Evidence that NJREs may be a putative endophenotype of obsessional symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder is added to to add to the evidence that this phenomenon, labeled "not just right experiences", has increasingly been receiving attention.
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