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Mental Health

Behavioural addictions in obsessive compulsive disorder – Prevalence and clinical correlates

 

Open Access: No.

 

Abstract

Behavioural addictions (BAs) share phenomenological overlap and neuropsychological similarities with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD); however, the relationship remains understudied. This study reports the prevalence of BAs in patients with OCD and healthy controls (HCs). It compares the clinical characteristics including impulsivity traits among OCD subjects with and without BAs. A total of 150 OCD patients and 131 HCs were assessed using structured instruments for the following BAs (Internet/Sex/Pornography/Mobile phone/Kleptomania/Compulsive buying/Pyromania/Gambling/Food/Exercise). Impulsivity was assessed using Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11). Subjects with OCD reported significantly higher prevalence of atleast one co-occurring BA compared to HC [OCD (70%); HC (58%), p < 0.036]. They also reported a significantly higher prevalence of Internet Addiction (29.3% vs 3.1%), pornographic addiction (12.7% vs 0%), and sex addiction (10% vs 1.5%). Though use of mobile phone use and food addiction were not significantly different when compared using the diagnostic criteria, subjects with OCD reported significantly higher intensity of symptoms when comparison was made using severity scores. When OCD patients with and without BAs were compared, those with BAs were significantly male, with a lower age at onset and assessment. They had significantly higher total impulsivity scores, motor and attentional sub-scale scores on BIS. The two groups did not differ in symptom profile and comorbidities of OCD. To conclude, the co-occurrence of BAs among subjects with OCD is common. Additionally, OCD subjects with co-occurring BAs have certain specific demographic characteristics and higher impulsivity.

 

Relevance

“When compared to healthy controls, subjects with OCD reported a significantly higher intensity of…pornography addiction.”

For many OCD patients, behavioral addictions like pornography “may signify relief seeking from the distress of the underlying disease.”  Yet this “relief seeking behaviour may become uncontrollable and compulsive.”

 

Citation

Rai, D., Jaisoorya, T. S., Narayanaswamy, J. C., Arumugham, S. S., & Reddy, Y. C. J. (2022). Behavioural addictions in obsessive compulsive disorder – Prevalence and clinical correlates, Psychiatry Research Communications, 2 (1), Article 100016. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psycom.2021.100016