• Biological psychiatry · Apr 2014

    Capacity to delay reward differentiates obsessive-compulsive disorder and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder.

    • Anthony Pinto, Joanna E Steinglass, Ashley L Greene, Elke U Weber, and H Blair Simpson.
    • New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University, New York, New York; Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, New York. Electronic address: Anthony_Pinto@columbia.edu.
    • Biol. Psychiatry. 2014 Apr 15; 75 (8): 653-9.

    BackgroundAlthough the relationship between obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD) has long been debated, clinical samples of OCD (without OCPD) and OCPD (without OCD) have never been systematically compared. We studied whether individuals with OCD, OCPD, or both conditions differ on symptomatology, functioning, and a measure of self-control: the capacity to delay reward.MethodsTwenty-five OCD, 25 OCPD, 25 comorbid OCD + OCPD, and 25 healthy control subjects completed clinical assessments and a validated intertemporal choice task that measures capacity to forego small immediate rewards for larger delayed rewards.ResultsOCD and OCPD subjects both showed impairment in psychosocial functioning and quality of life, as well as compulsive behavior, but only subjects with OCD reported obsessions. Individuals with OCPD, with or without comorbid OCD, discounted the value of delayed monetary rewards significantly less than OCD and healthy control subjects. This excessive capacity to delay reward discriminates OCPD from OCD and is associated with perfectionism and rigidity.ConclusionsOCD and OCPD are both impairing disorders marked by compulsive behaviors, but they can be differentiated by the presence of obsessions in OCD and by excessive capacity to delay reward in OCPD. That individuals with OCPD show less temporal discounting (suggestive of excessive self-control), whereas prior studies have shown that individuals with substance use disorders show greater discounting (suggestive of impulsivity), supports the premise that this component of self-control lies on a continuum in which both extremes (impulsivity and overcontrol) contribute to psychopathology.© 2013 Society of Biological Psychiatry Published by Society of Biological Psychiatry All rights reserved.

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