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Concepts and Controversies in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Contributor(s): Abramowitz, Jonathan S [editor.] | Houts, Arthur C [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders: Publisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2005.Description: XVIII, 438 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780387233703.Subject(s): Psychology | Clinical psychology | Personality | Social psychology | Psychology | Clinical Psychology | Personality and Social PsychologyDDC classification: 616.89 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Phenomenology -- Symptom Dimensions in OCD: Developmental and Evolutionary Perspectives -- Dimensional and Subtype Models of OCD -- Animal Models of Obsessive-Compulsive Behavior: A Neurobiological and Ethological Perspective -- Behavioral and Functional Animal Models of OCD -- The Case for the OCD Spectrum -- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Essential Phenomenology and Overlap with other Anxiety Disorders -- Trichotillomania: An Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorder? -- Overlap of Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Hypochondriasis with OCD -- Contrasting Nonparaphilic Sexual Addictions and OCD -- Compulsive Buying: A Disorder of Compulsivity or Impulsivity? -- Contrasting Tourette'S Syndrome and TIC Disorders with OCD -- Etiology -- Neuropsychiatric Models of OCD -- Cognitive-Behavioral Models of OCD -- Treatment -- Formal Cognitive Therapy: A New Treatment for OCD -- Treatment for OCD: Unleashing the Power of Exposure -- The Role of the Therapist in Behavior Therapy for OCD -- Self-Directed Exposure in the Treatment of OCD -- Combining Pharmacotherapy and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy in the Treatment of OCD -- Combining Serotonergic Medication with Cognitive-Behavior Therapy: Is it Necessary for all OCD Patients?.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Few syndromes in psychopathology generate as much popular curiosity and clinical exploration as does obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Since the 1970s, research on OCD has increased exponentially. Speci?c advances include an improved grasp of the heterogeneity of the disorder, identi?cation of putative subtyping schemes, and the development of increasingly sophisticated theoretical models of the etiology and maintenance. Perhaps most importantly, research has led to advances in treatment; andwhereasthe?rstlinetherapies(cognitive-behaviortherapyandserotonergicm- ication) are not entirely effective for every sufferer, they have transformed OCD from an unmanageable lifetime af?iction into a treatable problem that need not reduce quality of life. Despite the aforementioned advances, there have emerged a number of sharp disagreements concerning OCD. Differences have surfaced over phenomenological issues, etiological models, and approaches to treatment, and often occur (but not exclusively) along disciplinary lines between biologically oriented and cogniti- behaviorally oriented authorities. For example, medical approaches posit that abn- mal biological processes cause OCD, whereas psychosocial formulations emphasize the role of learning and dysfunctional cognitions. Yet because theoretical conjecture andempirical?ndingsfromwithineachtraditionaretypicallyaddressedtowardd- tinct and narrow audiences, clinicians, researchers, and students with broad interests are hindered from gaining a clear grasp of the diverse (and sometimes polarized) perspectives.
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Phenomenology -- Symptom Dimensions in OCD: Developmental and Evolutionary Perspectives -- Dimensional and Subtype Models of OCD -- Animal Models of Obsessive-Compulsive Behavior: A Neurobiological and Ethological Perspective -- Behavioral and Functional Animal Models of OCD -- The Case for the OCD Spectrum -- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Essential Phenomenology and Overlap with other Anxiety Disorders -- Trichotillomania: An Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorder? -- Overlap of Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Hypochondriasis with OCD -- Contrasting Nonparaphilic Sexual Addictions and OCD -- Compulsive Buying: A Disorder of Compulsivity or Impulsivity? -- Contrasting Tourette'S Syndrome and TIC Disorders with OCD -- Etiology -- Neuropsychiatric Models of OCD -- Cognitive-Behavioral Models of OCD -- Treatment -- Formal Cognitive Therapy: A New Treatment for OCD -- Treatment for OCD: Unleashing the Power of Exposure -- The Role of the Therapist in Behavior Therapy for OCD -- Self-Directed Exposure in the Treatment of OCD -- Combining Pharmacotherapy and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy in the Treatment of OCD -- Combining Serotonergic Medication with Cognitive-Behavior Therapy: Is it Necessary for all OCD Patients?.

Few syndromes in psychopathology generate as much popular curiosity and clinical exploration as does obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Since the 1970s, research on OCD has increased exponentially. Speci?c advances include an improved grasp of the heterogeneity of the disorder, identi?cation of putative subtyping schemes, and the development of increasingly sophisticated theoretical models of the etiology and maintenance. Perhaps most importantly, research has led to advances in treatment; andwhereasthe?rstlinetherapies(cognitive-behaviortherapyandserotonergicm- ication) are not entirely effective for every sufferer, they have transformed OCD from an unmanageable lifetime af?iction into a treatable problem that need not reduce quality of life. Despite the aforementioned advances, there have emerged a number of sharp disagreements concerning OCD. Differences have surfaced over phenomenological issues, etiological models, and approaches to treatment, and often occur (but not exclusively) along disciplinary lines between biologically oriented and cogniti- behaviorally oriented authorities. For example, medical approaches posit that abn- mal biological processes cause OCD, whereas psychosocial formulations emphasize the role of learning and dysfunctional cognitions. Yet because theoretical conjecture andempirical?ndingsfromwithineachtraditionaretypicallyaddressedtowardd- tinct and narrow audiences, clinicians, researchers, and students with broad interests are hindered from gaining a clear grasp of the diverse (and sometimes polarized) perspectives.

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