Huberman Lab - The Science & Treatment of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Episode Date: June 27, 2022In this episode, I explain the biology and psychology of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)—a prevalent and debilitating condition. I also discuss the efficacy and mechanisms behind OCD treatments�...��both behavioral and pharmacologic as well as holistic and combination treatments and new emerging treatments, including directed brain stimulation. I explain the neural circuitry underlying repetitive “thought-action loops” and why in OCD, the compulsive actions merely make the obsessions even stronger. I review cognitive-behavioral therapies like exposure therapy and SSRIs, holistic approaches, and nutraceuticals, detailing the efficacy of each approach and what science says about how to combine and sequence treatments. I describe an often effective approach for treating OCD where clinicians use cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to deliberately bring patients into states of high anxiety while encouraging them to suppress compulsive actions in order to help them learn to overcome repetitious thought/action cycles. This episode should interest anyone with OCD, anyone who knows someone with OCD or OCPD, and more generally, those interested in how the brain works to control thoughts and actions, whether those thoughts are intrusive or not. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) (00:04:06) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:08:28) What is OCD and Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder? (00:11:18) OCD: Major Incidence & Severity (00:15:10) Categories of OCD (00:21:33) Anxiety: Linking Obsessions & Compulsions (00:27:33) OCD & Familial Heredity (00:29:10) Biological Mechanisms of OCD, Cortico-Striatal-Thalamic Loops (00:39:36) Cortico-Striatal-Thalamic Loop & OCD (00:46:39) Clinical OCD Diagnosis, Y-BOCS Index (00:51:38) OCD & Fear, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) & Exposure Therapy (01:01:56) Unique Characteristics of CBT/Exposure Therapy in OCD Treatment (01:10:18) CBT/Exposure Therapy & Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) (01:22:30) Considerations with SSRIs & Prescription Drug Treatments (01:25:17) Serotonin & Cognitive Flexibility, Psilocybin Studies (01:31:50) Neuroleptics & Neuromodulators (01:36:09) OCD & Cannabis, THC & CBD (01:39:29) Ketamine Treatment (01:41:43) Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) (01:46:22) Cannabis CBD & Focus (01:47:50) Thoughts Are Not Actions (01:51:27) Hormones, Cortisol, DHEA, Testosterone & GABA (02:00:55) Holistic Treatments: Mindfulness Meditation & OCD (02:03:28) Nutraceuticals & Supplements: Myo-Inositol, Glycine (02:09:45) OCD vs. Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder (02:20:53) Superstitions, Compulsions & Obsessions (02:31:00) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Momentous Supplements, Instagram, Twitter, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman, an Omer Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today we are talking about Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, or OCD.
We are also going to talk about Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder,
which, as you will soon learn, is from obsessive compulsive disorder. In fact, many people that refer to
themselves or others as obsessive or compulsive or, quote unquote, having OCD or OCD about
this or OCD about that do not have clinically diagnosable OCD. Rather, many people have
obsessive compulsive personality disorder. However, there are many people in the world that have actual OCD.
And for those people, there is a tremendous amount of suffering.
In fact, OCD turns out to be number seven on the list of most debilitating illnesses,
not just psychiatric illnesses, but of all illnesses, which is remarkable and somewhat frightening.
The good news is, thanks to the fields of psychiatry, psychology, and science in general,
there are now excellent treatments for OCD, and we're going to talk about those treatments
today.
Those treatments range from behavioral therapies to drug therapies and brain stimulation
and even some of the more holistic or natural therapies.
As you'll soon learn for certain people, they may want to focus more on the behavioral
therapies, whereas for others, more on the drug-based therapies, and so on and so forth.
One extremely interesting and important thing I learned from this episode is that the
particular sequence that behavioral, end, or drug, and or holistic therapies are applied
is extremely important.
In fact, the outcomes of studies often depend on whether or not people start on drug treatment and then follow with cognitive behavioral treatment or vice versa.
We're going to go into all those details and how they relate to different types of OCD, because it turns out there are indeed different types of obsessions and compulsions and the age of onset for OCD
and so on and so forth.
What I can assure you is by the end of this episode, you'll have a much greater understanding
of what OCD is and what it isn't and what obsessive-compulsive personality disorder is and what
it is not.
And you'll have a rich array of different therapy options to explore in yourself or in
others that are suffering from OCD.
And if neither you or others that you know suffer from OCD or obsessive compulsive personality disorder,
the information covered in today's episode will also provide insight into how the brain and nervous system
translate thought into action generally. And also, you're going to learn a lot about
gold directed behavior generally. My hope is that by the end of the episode, you will both understand a lot about this disease state that we call OCD.
You will have access to information that will allow you to direct treatments to yourself or others in better ways.
And that you will gain greater insight into how you function and how human beings function in general.
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Let's talk about OCD or obsessive compulsive disorder.
First of all, as the name suggests, OCD includes thoughts or obsessions and compulsions
which are actions. The obsessions and the compulsions are often linked. In fact, most
of the time, the obsessions and the compulsions are linked such that the compulsion, the
behavior, is designed to relieve the obsession. However, one of the hallmark themes of obsessive
compulsive disorder is that the
obsessions are intrusive. People don't want to have them. They don't enjoy having them.
They just seem to pop into people's minds and they seem to pop into their mind recurrently.
And the compulsions, unlike other sorts of behaviors, provide brief relief to the obsession,
but then very quickly reinforce or strengthen the obsession.
This is a very key theme to realize
about obsessive compulsive disorder.
So I'm just gonna repeat it again.
These two features,
first the fact that the obsessions are intrusive
and recurrent,
as well as the fact that the compulsions,
the behaviors provide if anything only brief relief
for the obsessions, but in most cases,
simply serve to make the obsessions stronger are the hallmark features of obsessive-compulsive disorder.
And it turns out to be very important to keep these in mind as we go forward, not just because they
define obsessive-compulsive disorder, but they also define the sorts of treatments that will and will not work
for obsessive-compulsive disorder. And then once you understand a little bit about the neural circuitry underlying obsessive
compulsive disorder, which we'll talk about in a few moments, then you will clearly understand
why being a quote unquote obsessive person or having obsessive compulsive personality
is not the same as OCD.
In fact, we can leap ahead a little bit and compare and contrast OCD with obsessive compulsive
personality disorder along one very particular set of features.
Again, I'll go into this in more detail later, but it's fair to say that OCD
is characterized by these recurrent and intrusive obsessions.
And as I mentioned before, the fact that those obsessions get stronger as a
function of people performing certain behaviors.
So unlike an itch that you feel and then you scratch it and it feels better, OCD is, unlike an itch that you feel and then you
scratch it and it feels better, OCD is more like an itch that you feel you scratch it and the itch
intensifies. That contour or that pattern of behaviors and thoughts interacting is very different
than obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, which mainly involves a sense of delayed gratification
that people want and somewhat enjoy because it allows them to function better or
more in line with how they would like to show up in the world.
So again, OCD has mainly to do with obsessions that are
intrusive and recurrent whereas obsessive compulsive
personality disorder does not have that intrusive feature to
it. People do not mind or in fact often invite or like the
particular patterns of thought that lead them to be compulsive
along certain dimensions.
So leaving aside obsessive compulsive personality disorder for the moment, let's focus a bit
more on OCD and define how it tends to show up in the world.
First of all, OCD is extremely common.
In fact, current estimates are that anywhere from 2.5% to as high as three or even four percent of people
suffer from true OCD. That is an astonishingly high number. Now, the reason the range is so big,
2.5% all the way up to three or maybe even four percent, is that a lot of the features of OCD
go unnoticed both in the clinician's office and simply because people don't report it and don't
talk about it. In fact, it is possible to have recurrent and intrusive obsessions and not engage
in the sorts of behaviors that would ever allow people to notice that somebody has OCD.
That can be because some of the intrusive thoughts don't actually lead to overt behaviors like
hand washing or checking that other people would notice.
It can also be because people learn to disguise or hide their obsessions and their compulsions
out of shame or fear of looking strange or whatever it might be such that they have these
obsessive and intrusive thoughts and they do little micro behaviors like they might
tap their fingers on their fly as a way to avoid, at least in their own mind, something catastrophic happening.
That might seem crazy to you, it might seem bizarre, but this is the sort of thing that
operates in a lot of people.
And I really want to emphasize this because the clinical literature that are out there
really point to the fact that many people have OCD, full-blown OCD, and never report it because
of the kind of shame
and hiding associated with it.
Another thing to point out is that OCD is extremely debilitating.
I mentioned this a few minutes ago, but OCD is currently listed as a number seven in terms
of the most debilitating illnesses, not just mental illnesses or disorders, but all types
of illnesses,
including things like asthma and cancer, et cetera.
So you can imagine with that standing at number seven,
that it is both extremely common and extremely debilitating.
And as a consequence,
it's now realized that many hours, days, weeks, months,
or even years of work performance,
or showing up at work of
relational interactions really suffer as a consequence of people having OCD.
So this is a vital problem that the scientific and psychiatric and
psychological communities understand and it's one of the reasons that I'm doing
this podcast and of course I received a ton of interest in OCD because of this
incredibly high incidence of OCD and how debilitating it is.
We could go really deep into why it's so debilitating.
I don't want to spend too much time on that because I think most of that is pretty obvious,
but some of it is not.
For instance, one of the things that makes OCD so debilitating is of course the shame that
we talked about before, but it's also the fact that when people are focusing on their
obsessions and their compulsions, they're not able to focus on other things.
That's simply the way that the brain works.
We're not able to focus on too many things at once.
The other thing is that OCD takes a lot of time out of people's lives with recurrent
intrusive thoughts happening at very high frequency or even at moderate frequency.
People are spending a lot of time thinking about this stuff and they're thinking about the
behaviors they need to engage in and then engaging in the behaviors which as I mentioned before just served a strength in
the compulsions and so they're not actually doing the other things that make us functional
human beings like commuting to work or doing homework or doing work or listening when people are
talking or interacting or sports or working out all the things that make for a rich quality life
are taken over by OCD in many cases. So well, that might be obvious to some.
I'm not sure that it's obvious to everybody, just how much time OCD can occupy.
Another thing you'll soon learn is that sadly, a lot of the obsessions and compulsions
in OCD often relate to taboo topics.
And that's because the general categories of OCD fall into three different bins, checking obsessions and compulsions, repetition obsessions and
compulsions, and order obsessions and compulsions.
The checking ones are somewhat obvious, checking the
stove, or checking the locks, which I think we all tend to
do. I'm somebody, typically I'll head off to the
car to commute to work, and I don't think I'd lock the
front door and I'll go back once. But I won't go back
twice or 50 times.
People with OCD will often go back 20 or 30 times before they'll actually allow themselves
to drive off.
And then it's a real challenge for them to continue to drive off and discard with the idea
that they didn't check the stove or they didn't check the locks or they didn't check something
else critical.
Repetition, obsessions and compulsions, obviously can dovetail with the checking ones, but those
tend to be things like counting off of a certain number of numbers, like 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.
People will perform that repeatedly, repeatedly, repeatedly, or feel that they have to.
Remember years ago, watching a documentary about the band, the Ramones, most people
heard of the Ramones, right?
Jeans, T-shirts, aviator glasses.
Everyone had to change their last name to Ramone.
They weren't actually all related
to one another, by the way.
You had to change your last name to Ramone.
The Ramones had one band member who was admittedly
and known to others as having OCD.
And during that documentary,
which I forget the name, I think it was called,
can't remember, anyway, can't remember.
Hippocampo laps there.
But in this documentary, the band members describe
Joey Ramone as leaving hotels,
walking down the stairs to the parking lot,
but then having to walk up and down them seven or eight times
and sometimes getting out of the van again
and walking up and down them seven or eight times.
And it always had to be a certain number of times,
given a certain number of stairs.
This appears quote unquote crazy, but of course, we don't want to think of this as crazy.
This is somebody who very likely had full blown OCD.
Now that particular example, believe it or not, is not all that uncommon.
It just so happens that that example entailed certain compulsions and behaviors that were overt
and that other people could see.
And you can imagine how that would prevent somebody from moving about their daily life easily.
A lot of people, as I mentioned before, have obsessions and compulsions that they hide
and they do these little micro behaviors, or they'll just count off in their head as opposed
to generating some sort of walking up and downstairs or tapping or things of that sort.
So we have checking, we have repetition, and then there's order.
Order oftentimes is thought of as putting cleanliness or making sure everything is aligned
and perfect and orderly.
And oftentimes that is the case, but there are other forms of order that people with OCD
can focus on in a obsessive and compulsive way.
Things like incompleteness, the idea that one can't walk away from something or stop doing something
because something's not right or complete in that picture. It could be the way the table is set.
It could be the way that something's written on a page. It could be an email. Again, now we're
still talking about OCD, the disorder. We're not talking about obsessive compulsive personality
disorder. I'm aware of, well, I'll just be direct. Several colleagues of mine is just remarkable.
The order in their emails, every email is perfect,
punctuated, perfect, grammar, perfect.
Everything's space perfect.
Or do they have OCD?
Well, they might, they might not.
How would I know unless they disclose that to me?
But they might have obsessive-compulsive personality
disorder, or they just might be able to generate
a lot of order and they have a lot of discipline around the way they write in the way they
present any communication with anybody at all.
So if somebody has a OCD that's in the domain of order, it could be incompleteness and
the constant feeling of something not being completed and a need to complete it.
It can also be in terms of symmetry that everything be aligned in symmetric in some way.
This could be seen perhaps in young kids.
This is one example that I read in the literature
of children that need to arrange their stuffed animals
in exact same order every day.
And in a particular order to the point where
if you were to move the little stuffed frog
over next to the stuffed rabbit
that the child would have an anxiety reaction to that and feel literally compelled driven
to fix that, maybe even multiple times over and over again.
We'll talk about OCD and children versus adults in a little bit.
And then the other aspect of order, which is a little bit less than intuitive, is this
notion of disgust.
This idea that something is contaminated.
So we often think about OCD and handwashing behavior
in response to people feeling that something is contaminated,
a space, a towel, etc.
Or even simply somebody else's hand,
and so they're unwilling to shake somebody's hand.
You can imagine how these different bins of obsessions and compulsions
checking repetition and order
be extremely debilitating depending on how severe they are and how many different domains
of life they show up in.
Because oftentimes in movies and even the way I'm describing it now, it sounds as if,
okay, well, somebody has to check the locks, but they don't have to also check the stove,
or somebody has the need to count to seven, back and forth, up to seven and down to seven,
seven times, seven times,
seven times a day, or something of that sort,
where they need symmetry in very specific domains of life.
But it turns out that this recurrent and intrusive aspect
of obsessions leads people with OCD
to have checking repetition and or order compulsions everywhere.
So whether or not somebody is at work or in school or trying to engage in sport or trying
to engage in relationship or just something simple like walking down the street, the obsessions
are so intrusive that they show up and they compel people to do things in that domain
independent of whether or not they happen to be in one location or another.
In other words, the thought patterns and the behaviors take over
the environment as opposed to the environment driving the thought patterns and behaviors. So
it therefore becomes impossible to ever find a room that's clean enough to find a bed that's
made well enough, to find anything that's done well enough to remove the obsession. And
I know I said it multiple times now, but I'm going to say it many times throughout this episode in a somewhat
obsessive, but I believe justified way that every time that one engages in the compulsion related to the obsession, the obsession simply becomes stronger.
So you can imagine what a what a powerful and debilitating loop that really is. So let's drill a little bit deeper into how the obsessions and compulsions relate to one another. If we were to draw a line between the obsessions and the compulsions,
that line could be described as anxiety. Now, we need to define what anxiety is and to be
quite honest, most of psychology and science can't agree on exactly what anxiety is. Typically,
the way we think about fear is that it's a heightened state of autonomic arousal,
so increased heart rate, increased breathing, sweating, etc.
In response to an immediate and present threat or perceived threat, whereas anxiety, generally
speaking in the scientific literature, relates to the same sorts of thought patterns and
somatic bodily responses, heart rate, breathing, etc.
But without a clear and present danger being in the environment or right there.
So that's the way that we're going to talk about anxiety now.
And anxiety is really what binds the obsessions and compulsion such that someone will have
an intrusive thought.
So for instance, someone will have the thought that if they turn left on any street, that
something bad will happen.
Okay, that's an obsession.
It's actually not all that uncommon.
Now, how bad and what the specificity of that bad thing really is will vary.
Some people will think, if I turn left, something generally bad will happen.
It just makes me feel anxious, so they always insist on going right.
Whereas other people will think, if I turn left, so and so will die, or I will die,
or something terrible will happen.
I'll get a disease, or someone else will get a disease, or I'll be cursing myself or
somebody else in some very specific way.
This is unfortunately quite common in people with OCD.
So they have this feeling, and the feeling can be generally or specifically related to
a particular
outcome.
Beneath that is a feeling of anxiety, a quickening of heartbeat, a quickening of breathing,
a narrowing of one's visual focus.
I've talked about this before on other podcasts, the master stress and other podcasts, but
if you haven't heard those, let me just briefly describe that when we are in a state of
increase so-called autonomic arousal, alertness, stress, etc., our visual field literally narrows the aperture of our visual
field gets smaller.
And that's because of the relationship between the autonomic nervous system and your visual
system.
So you start seeing the world through sort of so distra view or through binocular like
view as opposed to seeing the big picture.
Why is that important?
Well, it literally sharpens and narrows your focus
toward the very thing that the obsessions
and the compulsions are focused on.
So the person walking down the street
who sees the opportunity to go left or right
will only see the bad decision.
Their visual field narrows very tightly
along that possibility of taking a left turn.
And I know as I describe this seems totally irrational,
but I want to emphasize that the person with OCD
knows it's irrational.
They might feel crazy because they're having these thoughts,
but they know it makes no sense whatsoever
that left somehow would be different than right
in terms of outcomes in this particular case.
And yet it feels as if it would.
In fact, in some cases, it feels as if they went left,
they would have a full blown panic attack.
So the idea here is that the obsessions and compulsions
are bound by anxiety, but then by taking a right hand turn,
again, in this one particular example,
by taking a right hand turn, there's a very brief,
I should mention, very brief relief of that anxiety at the time of
the decision to go right not left.
And there's an additional drop in anxiety, while one takes the right hand turn as opposed
to the left hand turn.
And then as I alluded to before, there's a reinforcement of the compulsion.
In other words, by going right, it doesn't create a situation in the brain and psychology
of the person that, you know what, I'm not anxious anymore.
Left would have probably been okay.
It reinforces the idea that right made me feel better or turning right made me feel better
and going left would have been that much worse.
Again, it reinforces the obsession even further. And again, we could swap out right turns and left turns with something like hand washing.
The feeling that something is contaminated and the need to wash one's hands, even though
one already washed their hands 20, 30, 50 times prior.
And we're actually going to go back to that example a little bit later when we talk about
one particular category of therapies that are very effective
in many people for OCD, which are the cognitive behavioral and exposure therapies.
Because I think some of you have heard of cognitive behavioral and exposure therapies,
but the way they are used to treat OCD is very much different than the way they are used
to treat other sorts of anxiety disorders and other sorts of disorders generally. So it's fair to say that up to 70% of people with OCD
have some sort of anxiety or elevated anxiety,
either directly related to the OCD
or indirectly related to the OCD.
And it's really hard to tease those apart
because OCD can create its own anxiety,
as I mentioned before, it can even increase its own anxiety.
And there's also an issue of depression.
Having OCD can be very depressing, right?
Especially if some of these OCD thoughts and behaviors
start to really impede people's ability to function in life,
it work in school and relationship,
they can start feeling less optimistic about life.
And in fact, some people can become suicidally depressed.
That's how bad OCD can be for us.
So we have to be careful when saying
that 70% of people with OCD also have anxiety or X number of people with OCD are also depressed
because we don't know whether or not the depression led the OCD or the other way around
or whether or not they're operating as we say in science in parallel. Some of the drug
treatments for OCD and depression and anxiety can tease some of that apart and we'll talk
about that. But I think it's fair to say that what binds the obsessions and compulsions is anxiety,
that there's a feeling of, or I should say, an urgent feeling of a need to get rid of
the obsession, and the person feels as if the only way they can do that is to engage in
a particular compulsive behavior.
Some people are probably wondering if there's a genetic component to OCD and indeed there
is, although the nature of it isn't exactly clear.
And oftentimes when people hear that something has a genetic component, they think it's
always directly inherited from a parent.
And that's not always the case.
There can be genes that surface in siblings or genes that surface in children that are
not readily apparent in terms of what
we call a phenotypes.
You have a genotype, the genin and then you have a phenotype, the way it shows up as a body
form or like eye color or how it shows up in terms of a behavioral or behavioral pattern.
Based on twin studies where researchers have examined identical twins, fraternal twins,
even identical twins that share the same sac in utero,
the what we call monocorionic, so sitting in the same little bag during pregnancy, or in different
little bags, you can see different levels of what's called genetic concordance. But if we are just
sort of cut a broad swath through all of the genetic data, it's fair to say that about 40 to 50%
OCD cases have some genetic component.
Some mutation or some inherited aspect that's genetic and that one could point to if they
got their genome mapped.
Now while that's interesting, I don't think it's terribly useful for most people.
First of all, you can't really control your genes, at least at this point in history,
even though there are things like epigenetic control and people are very excited about
technologies like CRISPR for modifying the genome.
In humans at some point, most people can't control
their genetics, right?
You can't pick who your parents were, as they say.
So just know that there is a genetic component
in about half of people with OCD, but not always.
Now, as is typical for this podcast,
I wanna focus on some of the neural mechanisms
and chemical systems in the brain and body
that generate obsessive compulsive disorder.
In fact, if you've watched this podcast before,
listen to this podcast before.
This is always how I structure things.
First, we introduce a topic,
and we explore that topic in detail,
and really define what it is and what it isn't.
And then it's very important that we focus on
what is known and what is not known about the biological mechanisms
that generate whatever that thing happens to be.
In this case, OCD and obsessive-compulsive personality
is a sort of.
Now, I want to emphasize that even if you don't have a background
in biology, I will make this information accessible to you.
And I also want to emphasize that for those of you
that are interested in treatments and are anxiously awaiting the description of things that can help with OCD,
I encourage you, if you will, to please try and digest some of the material about the underlying mechanisms,
because understanding even just a little bit of those biological mechanisms can really help shed light on why particular drug and behavioral treatments and other sorts of treatments work and don't work.
This is especially important in the case of OCD
where it turns out that the order and type of treatment
can really vary according to individual.
And that's something really special and important
about OCD that we really can't say
for a number of the other sorts of disorders
that we've described on previous podcasts.
So let's take a step back and look at the neural circuitry.
What's going on in the brain and body of people with OCD?
Why the intrusive recurrent thoughts?
Why the compulsions?
Why is that whole system bound by anxiety?
And in some ways, in thinking about that, I want you to keep in mind that the brain has
two main functions.
The brains, main functions, are to take care of all the housekeeping stuff.
Make sure digestion works, make sure the heart beats, make sure you keep breathing no matter what.
Make sure that you can see, you can hear, you can smell, etc.
The basic stuff, and then there's an enormous amount of brain real estate
that's designed to allow you to predict what's going to happen next, either in the immediate future or in the long-term future.
And largely that's done based on your knowledge of the past, so you also have memory systems.
And of course, you have systems in the brain and body that are designed to bind what's
happening at the housekeeping level, like your heart rate, to your anticipation of what's
going to happen next.
So if you're thinking about something very fearful, your body will have one type of reaction.
If you're thinking about something very pleasant and relaxing, your body will have another
type of reaction.
So whenever I hear about the brain body distinction, I have to just remind everybody that there
really is no distinction between brain and body.
When you think about it through the nervous system, the nervous system is the brain, the
eyes, the spinal cord, but of course all their connections with all the organs of the
body and the connections of all the organs of the body with the brain, the spinal cord, but of course all their connections with all the organs of the body and the connections of all the organs of the body with the brain,
the spinal cord, etc.
So as I describe these neural circuits, I don't want you to think of them as just things
happening in the head.
They are certainly happening in the head.
In fact, the circuits I'll describe most in detail do exist within the confines of your
cranial vault that's nerd speak for skull.
But those circuits are driving
particular predictions and therefore particular biases towards particular actions in your
body. They're creating a state of readiness or a state of desire to check or desire to
count or desire to avoid, etc., etc. So what are these circuits? Well, there's been a lot of
wonderful research exploring
the neural circuits underlying obsessive compulsive disorder.
And that's mainly been accomplished
through a couple of methods.
Most of those methods, when applied in humans,
involve getting some look into which brain areas are active
when people are having obsessions
and when people are engaging in compulsions.
Now that might seem simple to do,
but of course, your brain is housed inside the cranial vault
and in order to look inside it,
you have to use things like magnetic resonance imaging,
which is just fancy technology for looking at blood flow,
which relates to activation of neurons, nerve cells,
or things like PET, PET imaging,
which has nothing to do with the verb PET
and has nothing to do with your house PET, has everything to do with positron emission tomography, which is another way of seeing
which brain areas are active and you can also use PET to figure out what sorts of neurochemicals are
active like dopamine, etc. Many studies, we can fairly say dozens, if not hundreds of studies,
have now identified a particular circuit or loop
of brain areas that are interconnected and very active in obsessive compulsive disorder.
That loop includes the cortex, which is kind of the outer shell of the human brain, the
lumpy stuff, as it sometimes appears, if the skull is removed, and it involves an area
called the striatum, which is involved in action selection and holding
back action.
The striatum is involved in what's commonly called go and no co types of behaviors.
So every type of behavior like picking up a pen or a mug of coffee involves a go type
function.
It involves generating an action.
But every time I resist an action, my nervous system is also doing that
using this brain structure, the striatum,
which includes, among other things, the basal ganglia.
I've talked about that before.
I'm not trying to overload you with terminology here,
but I know some people are interested in terminology.
So you have go behaviors and you have no go,
resisting of behaviors, not going toward behavior.
The cortex and the striatum are in this intricate, back and forth talk.
It's really loops of connections.
The cortex doesn't tell the striatum what to do.
The striatum doesn't tell the cortex what to do.
They're in a crosstalk, like any good relationship.
There's a lot of back and forth communication.
There's a third element in this corticosteroidal loop, as it's called, and that's the thalamus.
Now the thalamus is not a structure I've talked a lot about before on this podcast, but
it's one of my favorite structures to think about and teach about in neuroanatomy, which
I teach back at Stanford and have taught for many years elsewhere, because the thalamus
is this incredible egg-like structure in the center of your brain that has different
channels through it, channels for relaying visual information
or auditory information or touch information from your environment up into your cortex and
as a consequence making certain things that are happening to you and around you, apparent
to you, making you aware of them, making you perceive them and suppressing others.
So for instance, right now, if you're hearing me say this,
your thalamus has what are called auditory nuclei.
There's just collections of neurons
that respond to sound waves
that are of course coming in through your ears.
And your thalamus is active in a way
that those particular regions of your thalamus
are allowed, literally, permitted to pass the information
coming from your ears through some other steps. But then to your thalamus, your auditory thalamus are allowed, literally, permitted to pass the information coming from your ears
through some other steps.
But then to your Thalamus, your auditory Thalamus, then up to your cortex, and you can hear
what I'm saying right now.
At the same time, your Thalamus is surrounded by a kind of a shell, something called the
philamic reticular nucleus.
Again, you don't have to remember the names, but this philamic reticular nucleus also sometimes
called the reticular philamic nucleus.
This is, believe it or not, a subject of debate in science.
There are people that literally hated each other, probably still hate each other, even
though one of them is dead.
For decades, because they would argue as the LAMIC particular nucleus, the other was reticular
thalamic nucleus.
Anyway, these are scientists, they're people.
They tend to debate.
But the LAMIC particular nucleus, as I'm going to call it, serves as a sort of gate as to
which information is allowed to pass through up to your conscious experience and which In my particular nucleus, as I'm going to call it, serves as a sort of gate as to which
information is allowed to pass through up to your conscious experience and which is not.
And that gating mechanism is strongly regulated by the chemical GABA.
GABA is a neurotransmitter that is inhibitory, as we say.
It serves to shut down or suppress the activity of other neurons.
So the philamic particular nucleus is really saying,
no, touch information cannot come in right now.
You should not be thinking about the contact
of the back of your legs with the chair
that you're sitting on.
Andrew, you should be thinking about what you're trying to say
and what you're hearing and how your voice sounds
and what you see in front of you, et cetera.
Whereas if I'm about to get an injection from a doctor,
or I'm in pain, or I'm in pleasure,
I'm going to think about my somatic sensation
at the level of touch.
And I'm probably going to think less about smells
in the room, although I might also
think about smells in the room, or what I'm seeing
and what I'm hearing.
We can combine all these different sensory modalities,
but that the lemic-reticular nucleus
really allows us to funnel to direct
particular categories of sensory experience into our conscious awareness and suppress other
categories of sensory experience. In addition, the lemicarticular nucleus plays a critical role
in which thoughts are allowed to pass up to our conscious perception and which ones are not.
are allowed to pass up to our conscious perception, and which ones are not.
So much so that some neuroscientists
and indeed some neurophilosophers,
if you wanna call them that,
have theorized or philosophized
that the philamic particular nucleus
is actually involved in our consciousness.
Now consciousness is in a topic
that I really wanna talk about this episode,
and it's a very kind of mushy, murky,
as we say in science, it's a schmooey
term because it doesn't really have clear definitions, so arguments about it often get lost
in the fact that people are arguing about different things.
But when I say consciousness, what I mean is conscious awareness.
So let's zoom out and take a look at the circuit that we've got and that we now know based
on neuroimaging studies is intimately involved in generating obsessions and compulsions
in OCD. We have a cortex or neocortex, which is involved in generating obsessions and compulsions in OCD.
We have a cortex, or neo cortex, which is involved in perception and understanding of what's happening.
We have the striatum and basal ganglia, which are involved in generating behaviors,
go, and suppressing behaviors, no go.
And we have the thalamus, which collects all of our sensory experience in parallel, hearing, touch, smell, etc.
Not so much smell through the thalamus, I should mention, but the other senses, that is.
And then that thalamus is encased by the thalamic particular nucleus, which serves as a kind
of a guard, saying, you can pass through and you can pass through, but you, you, you can't
pass through up to conscious understanding and perception.
So that loop, this corticostrietyl thalamic loop, this corticosteroidal thalamic loop, corticosteroidal thalamic loop, is the
circuit thought to underlie OCD.
And dysfunction in that circuit is what's thought to underlie OCD.
Now, again, this circuit exists in all of us and it can operate in healthy ways or it can
operate in ways that make us feel unhealthy or even suffer from full-own OCD.
How do we know that this circuit is involved in OCD?
Well, there we can look to some really interesting studies that involve bringing human subjects
into the laboratory and generating their obsessions and compulsions and then imaging their brain
using any variety of techniques that we talked about before.
What would such an experiment look like?
Well, in order to do that sort of experiment,
first of all, you need people who have OCD,
and of course, you need control subjects that don't.
And you need to be able to reliably evoke
the obsessions and the compulsions.
Now, it turns out this is most easily, or I should say,
most simply done, because it can't be easy
for the people with OCD, but this is most straightforward.
That's the word I was looking for.
Most straightforward when looking at the category of obsessions and compulsions that relate
to order and cleanliness.
So what they do typically is bring subjects into the laboratory who have a obsession about
germs and contamination and a compulsion to hand wash.
And they give these people, believe it or not,
a sweaty towel that contains the sweat and the odor
and the liquid, basically, from somebody else's hands.
In fact, they'll sometimes have someone wipe their own sweat
off the back of their neck and put it on the towel
and then they'll put it in front of the person,
which, as you can imagine, for someone with OCD
is incredibly anxiety-provoking.
And almost always evokes these obsessions about, oh, this is really bad.
This is really bad.
This is really bad.
I need to clean.
I need to clean.
I need to clean.
Now, they're doing all this while someone is in a brain scanner or while they're being
imaged for positron emission tomography.
And then they can also look at the patterns of activation in the brain while the person is doing handwashing.
Although sometimes the apparatus associated with these imaging studies make it hard to do
a lot of movement, they can do these sorts of studies.
They have done these sorts of studies in many subjects using different variations of what
I just described.
And lo and behold, what lights up, when I say lights up. What sort of brain regions are more metabolically active,
more blood flow, more neural activity?
Well, it's this particular corticostriatal phalamic
loop.
In addition to that, some of the drug treatments that are
effective in some, and I want to emphasize some
individuals at suppressing obsessions and or compulsions,
such as the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
or SSRIs, which we'll talk about in a little bit.
When people take those drugs, they see not just a suppression of the obsession and compulsion,
but also a suppression of these particular neural circuits.
They become less active.
Now I want to emphasize and telegraph a little bit of what's coming later, these drugs like SSRIs do not work for everybody with OCD, and as many of you know, they carry
other certain problems and side effects for many, but not all individuals. But nonetheless, what we
have now is an observation that this circuit, the cortical striatophilomic loop, is active in OCD,
we have a manipulation that when people take a drug
that at least in those individuals is effective
in suppressing or eliminating the obsessions and compulsions,
there's less activity in this loop.
And thanks to some very good animal model studies
that at least at this point in time
you really couldn't do in humans,
although soon that may change.
We now know in a causal way that the equivalent circuitry, A, exists in other animals, such
as mice, such as cats, such as monkeys, and that activation of those particular corticostriatal
philamic circuits in animal models can indeed evoke OCD in an individual that prior to that
did not have OCD.
So I'm just going gonna briefly describe one study.
This is a now classic study published
in the journal science, one of the three Apex journals in 2013.
The first author on this paper is Susanna Mari,
AHM-ARI.
I will provide a link to this in the show notes
as a truly landmark paper done in Renee Hens Lab
at Columbia University.
And the title of the paper is repeated
corticosteroidal stimulation generates.
That's the keyword here.
Generates persistent OCD-like behavior.
What they did is they took mice, mice do mouse things.
They move around, they play with toys, they eat,
they pee, they mate, they do various things in their cage,
but they also groom.
Humans groom, animals with fur groom. Well, you hope most people groom, some people over groom,
some people under groom, but most people groom.
They'll comb their hair, they'll clean et cetera.
Those are normal behaviors that humans engage in.
I'm not aware that mice comb their hair,
but mice adjust their hair.
So they'll kind of pet their hair, and they'll do this.
They'll sometimes even do it to each other.
We used to have mice in the lab.
Now we only do human studies, but the mice will groom themselves and typical what we call
wild type mice, not because they're wild, but because they're typical, will groom themselves
at a particular frequency, but not to the point where their hair is falling out, not constantly.
They are grooming some of the time and they're doing other mouse things, other mouse times.
So in this particular study, what they did is they used some technology, which actually
was discussed on a previous episode of the Hubert and Laud podcast.
This is technology that was developed by a psychiatrist and bioengineer by the name of Carl
Diceroth, one of my colleagues at Stanford School of Medicine.
This is a technology that allows researchers to use the presentation of light to control
neural activity in particular brain areas in a very high fidelity way.
You control the activity in the cortex of the striatum or the thalmas when you want
and how you want.
It's really a beautiful technology.
In any event, what they did in this study is, or I should say, what Susan Amari and colleagues
did in this study was to stimulate the corticostriatal
circuitry in animals that did not have any OCD-like behavior. And when they did that, those
animals started grooming incessantly to the point where their hair was falling out or they
even, you know, they didn't take the experiments this far, fortunately, but the animals would
have a tendency to almost rub themselves raw. In the same way that somebody who has a
compulsion to hand wash would, sadly, people will hand
wash to the point where their hands are actually bleeding and raw.
It's really that bad.
I know that's tough imagery to imagine.
You can't even imagine why someone would self harm in that way.
But again, that's that incredible anxiety relationship between the compulsion, excuse me,
the obsession and the compulsion and the fact that engaging
in the compulsion simply strengthens the obsession
and therefore the anxiety.
So that collection of studies of data,
FMRI, PET scanning in humans, the treatment with SSRIs
and these experiments where researchers have actively
triggered these particular circuits in animal models that previously
did not have too much activity in these circuits.
Then they observe OCD emerging really points squarely to the fact that the cortical stridal
thalamic loop is likely to be the basis of OCD.
Now, of course, other circuits could also be involved, but the cortical stridal thalamic
circuit seems to be the main circuit
generating OCD-like behavior.
That's a lot of mechanism.
Hopefully, it was described in a way that you can digest and understand.
Some of you might be thinking, well, so what?
Why does that help me?
I can't reach into my brain and turn off my cortex.
I can't reach into my brain and turn off my thalamus.
Indeed, on the one hand, that's true.
But as you'll next learn, when thinking about
the various behavioral treatments and drug treatments and holistic treatments for OCD, what you'll
notice is that each one taps into a different component of this corticosteriotal thalamic loop.
And by understanding that, you can start to see why certain treatments might work at one stage of
the illness versus others. You will also start to understand why certain treatments might work at one stage of the illness versus others.
You will also start to understand why obsessive-compulsive personality disorder does not have the same
sorts of engagements of these neural loops and yet relies on other aspects of brain and body,
and therefore responds best to other sorts of treatments. Or in some cases, people with obsessive and
complicit personality disorder are not even seeking treatment
as I alluded to before.
The point here is that by understanding the underlying mechanism,
why certain drugs and behavioral treatments work and don't work will become immediately
apparent.
And in thinking about that, in knowing that, you'll be able to make excellent choices, I believe,
in terms of what sorts of treatments you pursue, what sorts of treatments you abandon, and most importantly, the order, the sequence that
you pursue and apply those treatments.
Before we go any further, I'd like to give people a little bit of a window into what a
diagnosis for OCD would look like.
It would be a sense of the sorts of questions that a clinician would ask to determine whether
or not somebody has OCD or not.
Now, I wanna be clear,
I'm not gonna do this in an exhaustive way.
I wouldn't want anyone to self-diagnose,
although I'm hoping that by sharing some of this
that some of you might get insight into whether or not
you do have obsessions and compulsions
that might qualify for OCD
and perhaps even to seek out help.
The most commonly used test of OCD, or for OCD, I should say, is called the
Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale. And this is, you know, scientists love acronyms as do the
military. And it's the Y-box, the Y-Dash B-O-C-S, the Y-box. So typically, someone will go into the
clinic either because a family member encouraged them to or because they feel that they're suffering from obsessions and compulsions.
And before the clinician would proceed with any kind of direct questions, they would very
clearly define what obsessions and compulsions are.
And here I'm actually reading from the Y-Box.
So quote, obsessions are unwelcome and distressing ideas, thoughts, images, or impulses that
repeatedly enter your mind.
They may seem to occur against your will. They may be repugnant to you. You may recognize them as senseless and they may not
fit your personality. And there are compulsions. Quote compulsions on the other hand are behaviors
or acts that you feel driven to perform, although you may recognize them as senseless or excessive.
At times, you may try to resist doing them, but this may prove difficult. You may experience anxiety
that does not diminish until the behavior is completed. And as I mentioned before, in many cases, immediately
after the behavior is completed, the anxiety doesn't just return, it indeed can strengthen.
Now, there are tremendous number of questions on the YBOX. So I'm just going to highlight
a few of the general categories. Typically, the person will fill out a checklist, so they will designate whether or not currently
or in the past, they have, for instance, aggressive obsessions, fear that one might harm themselves,
fear that one might harm others, fear that they'll steal things, fear that they will act
on unwanted impulses, currently or in the past or both.
That's one category.
The other one are contamination obsessions, so concern with dirt or germs bothered by sticky substances or residues, etc., etc.
So there are a bunch of different categories that include for instance sexual obsessions,
what are called saving obsessions,
even moral obsessions, right, excess concern with right or wrong or morality,
concerned with sacrilege and blasphemy,
obsession with need for symmetry and exactness. Again, all of these questions being answered as either present in the past or not present
in the past, present currently or not present currently.
And then the test generally transitions over to questions about target symptoms.
They really try and get people to identify if they have obsessions.
What are their exact obsessions?
Now, this turns out to be really important because as we talk about some of the therapies
that really work, I'll just give away a little bit of why they work best in certain cases
and why they don't work as well.
In other cases, it turns out that it becomes very important for the clinician and the patient
to not just identify the obsessions and the compulsions generally in a kind of a generic
or top-con
tour way, but to really encourage or even force the patient to define very precisely what
the biggest most catastrophic fear is, what the obsession really relates to.
That turns out to be very important in disrupting this corticosterietal philamic loop and getting
relief from symptoms one way or the other.
So the Yale Brown obsessive-compulsive scale, this y-box, again, is very extensive. It goes on for
dozens of pages, actually, and has all these different categories, not so much designed to just
pinpoint what people obsess about or what they feel compelled to do, but to also try and identify
about or what they feel compelled to do, but to also try and identify what is the fear that's driving all this, right? In the way that we've set this up thus far, we've been talking about obsessions
and compulsions as kind of existing in a vacuum. You're obsessed about germs and you're compelled
to wash your hands. Obsessed about germs, compelled to wash your hands, or obsessed about symmetry,
compelled to put right angles on everything, or obsessed about counting and therefore counting, etc. But beneath that is a cognitive component that is not at all apparent from someone describing
their obsession and from someone describing or displaying their compulsion. The deeper layer
to all that is what is the fear exactly if one were to not perform the compulsion, meaning what is the
fear that's driving the obsession?
So that brings us to a very powerful category of treatments that I should say does not work
in everybody with OCD, but works in many people with OCD and really speaks to the underlying
neural circuitry that generates OCD and how to interrupt
it.
And that is the treatment of cognitive behavioral therapy and in particular exposure-based
cognitive behavioral therapy.
So we're going to talk about cognitive behavioral therapy and exposure therapy now, but right
at the outset, I want to distinguish the kinds of cognitive behavioral therapy and exposure
therapies that are done for obsessive compulsive disorder, the kinds of cognitive behavioral therapy and exposure therapies that are done for obsessive compulsive disorder
The sorts of cognitive behavioral therapies that are done for other types of mental challenges and disorders
because
Cognitive behavioral therapy for OCD really has everything to do with identifying the utmost fear
In some sense we can think of fears as kind of along a hierarchy, right? In the example earlier of somebody being afraid to turn left and therefore feeling compelled
to turn right, you would want to take that person and really understand what do they
fear most about turning left.
Now they might not be aware of it.
They might not be conscious to what that really is.
But if you were to probe them in a clinical setting, you would eventually get to an answer.
That answer could be at first, I don't know, just, it's just bad.
I don't know why it's bad.
It makes no sense, but it's just bad.
I do not want to go left.
I don't know why I don't know why.
But if you were to push that person a little bit in a respectful and kind and caring way
aimed at their treatment, if you were to push them and say, well, what do you mean my bad?
If you turn left, do you think the world would end?
They might say, no, the world's not gonna end,
but someone is going to die suddenly.
I know that sounds crazy,
but somebody's gonna die suddenly.
And almost, this almost sounds like superstition.
I'll talk about superstitions later,
but indeed it is somewhat superstitious.
So for instance, you would say, who's gonna die?
And they'd say, I don't know.
And you'd say, no, really, who's gonna die?
If you think about this, are you going to die?
Is so-and-so going to die?
And very often, very often.
What you find is that people will start to reveal the underlying
obsession at a level of detail that both to the clinician
and to them can be somewhat astonishing,
even though they've been living with that detail
in their mind for a very long time.
Now how could somebody start to reveal detail about something that's existed in their mind
for a very long time, but not known about it, right?
Not been aware of it.
Now some of you might think, oh, it's repressed or something.
That's not at all what's happening.
If you think about the architecture of OCD, typically people will have an obsession and then
they'll engage in the compulsion as quickly as they can to relieve that obsession.
So in many ways, the disease itself prevents people from ever getting to the bottom of that
trough, ever getting to the point where they really, clearly articulate to themselves exactly
what it is that they fear.
But it becomes so essential to articulate exactly what it is that they fear for a somewhat
counterintuitive reason. You might think, oh, the moment they realize
exactly what they fear, everything lifts. The circuit turns off and they just feel better because
they realized it. I wish I could tell you that's the case, but it turns out it's the opposite.
What the clinician is actually trying to do is get people to feel more anxiety, not less.
What they're trying to get them to do is to short
circuit, no pun intended, to intervene in their own neural circuit, I should say, with that
relief of anxiety, however brief, brought on by engaging in the compulsion related to
the obsession. So whereas typically someone would feel the obsession with, oh, I don't want
to turn left because something bad's going to happen, someone's going to die, and then they turn right.
They never get the option or the opportunity to really explore what would happen where
they to turn left or to not be able to turn right.
By forcing them down the path of inquiry that leads them to the place where they very clearly
identify the fear, the anxiety.
It raises the anxiety in them, and that's actually what the clinician is after.
Cognitive behavioral therapy and exposure therapy in the context of OCD most often involves
trying to get people to tolerate, not relieve their anxiety.
This is extremely important. And I realize
there's variation to this depending on the style of cognitive behavioral therapy,
the style of exposure therapy, but almost across the board, the goal again is to
get people to feel the anxiety that normally they are able to at least partially
relieve, however briefly, by engaging in the compulsion. So if we think back to that circuit of corticostrietyl philamic, what's going on here?
Where is CBT intervening?
What part of the circuit is getting interrupted?
Well, as you recall, the cortex is involved in conscious perception.
The thalamus and that philamic-reticular nucleus are involved in the passage of certain types
of experience up to our conscious perception
and not others.
And the strutum is involved in this go, no go type behavior.
When OCD is really expressing itself in its fullness, people feel an anxiety around a
particular thought, and they either have a go, for instance, wash hands, or a no go,
do not turn left type reaction.
By having people progressively in a kind of hierarchical way reveal their precise source
of anxiety, their utmost fear in this context, what happens is they feel enormous amounts
of autonomic arousal.
Now in the context of anxiety treatment or other types of treatments,
the goal would be to teach people to dampen, to lessen their anxiety through breathing techniques,
or through visualization techniques, or through self-talk, or through social support. Any of the
number of things that are well known to help people self-regulate their own anxiety, here it's
the opposite. What they're trying to get the patient to do is to really feel the anxiety at its maximum,
but then do the exact opposite of whatever the normal compulsion is.
So if normally the compulsion is to wash one's hands, then the idea is to suppress hand
washing while being in the experience of the utmost anxiety.
Or in the case of not turning left, the person is expected to or would hopefully be able to actually turn
left.
And as you can imagine, that would evoke tremendous anxiety and yet to tolerate that
anxiety.
Now, I want to be very clear, this is not the sort of thing you want to do on your own,
this is not the sort of thing you want to do for a friend, this is done by trained licensed
psychologists and psychiatrists. But nonetheless, it really points to the fact that as an anxiety-related disorder, OCD
is distinct from other types of anxiety and anxiety-related disorders, things like PTSD
and panic disorder, et cetera, because the goal, again, is to bring the person right up
close to the thing that they fear the most and then to interrupt
the circuit. And now you should be able to know just intuitively, because you understand the
mechanisms, that the circuit you're trying to disrupt is the pattern of information flow
from the thinking part of the brain, the perception part of the brain, which is the cortex,
to the striatum. The striatum has these neurons, which are active, that essentially are, I know it sounds
a little bit like a discussion about free will, but they're trying to get the person to
generate a certain behavior, a suppressor, a certain behavior.
As anxiety ramps up, it's a hydraulic pressure to do that very thing that they've done
for so long, and they suffer from so much.
We talked about hydraulic pressure in the context of aggression in the aggression episode.
This is very similar.
There's a kind of a, now when I say hydraulic pressure, it's not actual hydraulic pressure,
it's the confluence of a lot of different systems.
It's neurochemical, we'll soon learn.
It's hormonal, it's electrical, it's a lot of different things operating in parallels.
We can't point to one chemical or transmitter.
What's happening is the person is feeling compelled
to act, act, act, to relieve the anxiety
and through a progressive type of exposure, right?
You don't throw people in the deep end
in this kind of therapy right off the bat.
You gradually ratchet them toward
or move them toward the discussion
of exactly what they fear the most
and then eventually move them toward
the interruption of the compulsion
as they're feeling this extremely elevated anxiety.
Of course, within the context of a supportive,
clinical setting, but in doing that,
what you are teaching people is that the anxiety
can exist without the need to engage in the compulsion.
Now, some of this might sound to people like,
oh, this is a lot of the kind of fancy psychological
neuroscience speak around something that's kind of intuitive, but I think for most people, this is a lot of the kind of fancy psychological neuroscience speak around something that's kind of intuitive
But I think for most people
This is not intuitive and for people with OCD
the
There's no really other way to put it the impulse the the compulsion to avoid anxiety is such a powerful driving force
That it should now make sense to you as to why being able to tolerate anxiety and really sit with it and do the exact opposite of what you're normally compelled to do is going to be the path
treatment. And indeed CBT has been shown to be enormously effective again for a large number of
people with OCD, but not all of them. And oftentimes it requires that it also be used in concert with
certain drug treatments, which we're going to talk about in a moment. Next, let's talk about some of the really unique features of cognitive behavioral therapy
and exposure therapy in the context of OCD that you often don't see in the use of CBT,
that is, cognitive behavioral therapy, for other types of psychiatric challenges and disorders.
The first element is one of stair casing. And I already mentioned this before,
but this gradual and progressive increase
in the anxiety that you're trying to evoke
from the patient, from the person suffering from OCD.
That's done in the context of the office
or the laboratory, again, by a trained and licensed clinician.
But then the person leaves, right? They leave the office.
They leave the laboratory. And a very vital component of CBT and exposure therapy for people
with OCD is that they have and perform what's called homework, is literally what they call.
This might be seen in other sorts of treatments, but for OCD, homework is extremely important.
Because within the context of a laboratory experiment
or the clinic, patients often feel so much support
that they can tolerate those heightened levels of anxiety
and interrupt their compulsions.
Whereas when they get home, oftentimes the familiarity
of the environment brings them to a place
where all of a sudden those obsessions and compulsions
start interacting the same way,
and they have a very hard time suppressing the behaviors.
Why would that be?
Well, in neuroscience, we have a phrase that's called condition place preference and condition
place avoidance.
There's some other phrases too, but basically it all has to do with a simple thing, which
is when you feel something repeatedly in a given environment or sometimes even once within
a given environment, you tend to feel that same thing again when you return to that or similar environments.
Okay, so condition place, blank or condition place, that is simply fancy nerd speak for
the fact that when you're in a place and something good happens, you tend to feel good if you
return to that place or replace like it.
Or if something bad happens in a given place, you tend to feel bad when you return to that
place or a place like it.
I think that most sailing example that leapsaps to mind is an unfortunate category of bad,
but I had some friends years ago, visit San Francisco.
There's been an ongoing.
It seems like it's been happening forever, but this is really in the last decade of daytime
break-ins and nighttime break-ins into cars to steal anything from computers to what seems
to be like a box of tissues.
And there are numerous reasons for this.
I don't want to get into. it's not the topic of today's podcast
But I will use this the opportunity to say if you're visiting anywhere in the Bay Area
Do not leave anything in your car because the window will get broken into sometimes in broad daylight some good friends of mine
We're visiting the Bay Area and I texted them and said
Hey, by the way when you're headed to dinner guys make sure you bring in all your
Luggage and computers or ever however inconvenient that might be.
They wrote back too late, everything got stolen.
So some years ago now, I think five, six years ago this happened.
Sadly, everything got stolen.
Most of it could be replaced, but some of it was very sentimental to them.
Every time we talk, every time we consider having a meeting in a particular city, this comes
up.
I don't want to be there. I don't like that city anymore, et cetera.
And of course, San Francisco has some wonderful redeeming features,
but it only takes one bad incident in one location to kind of color the whole
picture dark, so to speak.
The brain works that way. The brain generalizes it. It's not a very specific organ.
Again, it's a prediction machine in addition to other things.
So in the case of CBT therapy,
the reason there's homework is that when people go home,
oftentimes, that's when they relapse, if you wanna call it,
back into their obsessions and compulsions,
and that location, that conditioned place,
is where it becomes most important to challenge the anxiety
and to deal with the anxiety,
to not try and suppress the anxiety through compulsions
or other means.
And when I say other means, I wanna highlight something,
we'll come up again a little bit later in the podcast
that substance abuse is very common in people with OCD,
because of the anxiety component and also because of
people's feelings that they just can't escape
from the thoughts or behavioral patterns
that are so characteristic of OCD.
So alcohol abuse or cannabis abuse or other forms of narcotics abuse are very common in OCD.
Later we'll talk about whether or not cannabis can or cannot help with OCD, but needless
to say suppressing anxiety is exactly the wrong direction that one should take if the goal is to ultimately
Relieve or eliminate the OCD. So we now have two characteristics of CBT exposure therapy that are extremely important for OCD
And somewhat unique to the treatment of OCD
And that's the stair casing up towards the really bad fear the really severe and specific
Articulation and understanding and feeling of how bad things
really would be if someone engaged in a particular behavior or avoided a particular behavior.
Then there's the component of homework given by the clinician for the person to be able
to create a broader set of context in which they can deal with the anxiety, not engage in
the compulsions.
And then a very unique feature of treatment of OCD
that you don't see in many other psychiatric disorders
are home visits.
I find this fascinating.
I think that the field of psychiatry and psychology
traditionally doesn't allow for or invite home visits.
But this component of context, location and context
being so vital to the treatment and relief
of OCD has inspired many psychiatrists and psychologists to get permission to do home visits
where they actually go visit their patients in their native setting in their home cages,
right?
They're not mice, but in their home home cages, right?
I'm being facetious here, but people, mice living cages, at least in the laboratory
and humans generally live in houses or elsewhere. So they visit them in their home in order to see
how they're interacting and the particular locations that evoke the most anxiety and the least
anxiety. Some of the, I don't want to call them crutches, but some of the tools that people are
using to confront and deal with, the obsessions and compulsions, and in
particular, to try and identify some of the tools and tricks that people are using to
try and avoid that heightened anxiety.
Because once again, and I know I'm repeating myself, but I think this is just so vital and
so unique about OCD and the treatment of OCD, the critical need for the patient to be able
to tolerate extremely elevated levels of anxiety is so
crucial. So if people are avoiding certain rooms in the house or if people are
avoiding certain foods or certain locations in the kitchen, the clinician can start to identify
that by mere observation. And I should mention here that patients are not always aware of
how they are interacting with
their home environment.
Some of these patterns are so deeply ingrained in people that they don't even realize that
they're constantly turning to the left or they don't even realize that they're only washing
their hands on one side of the sink.
And so the clinician by visiting the home can start to interrogate a bit in a polite way
and a friendly and a supportive way as to, do you ever think about why you always flip the faucet to the left or flip the faucet to the right, etc.
Now we all do a lot of things that are habitual.
We all do things that are somewhat regular from day to day.
In fact, I would invite you to ask yourself, do you always put your toothbrush in the same
location?
Do you always cap the toothbrush in the same location? Do you always cap the
toothbrush before or after you use it? What sorts of things do you wipe the little threading
on the toothpaste or not? I'm somebody I confess that I have, well, I have about 3,500 pet
peeps, but one of my pet thieves is toothpaste kind of on the thread of the toothpaste. It really
bothers me. I don't know why. Almost as much as trying to wipe it off bothers me, which creates a certain challenge.
And if I talk about this any further,
then I think I would qualify for obsessive compulsive
personality disorder.
But I have to say, I don't experience a ton of anxiety
about it.
It doesn't govern my life.
In fact, I realize that right now there are tubes
of toothpaste that have toothpaste along the thread
everywhere in the world.
It doesn't really bother me.
I can still sit here and provide some information about OCD to you. It's not intrusive, at least not to my awareness.
So by the home visit, the therapist can really start to explore through direct
questioning and can allow the patient to explore through direct questioning of themselves,
the things that it might be conscious of and the things that they might not be conscious of
that would qualify for OCD.
So, I'd like to just briefly summarize the key elements of cognitive behavioral therapy
and exposure therapy and how they can be combined with drug treatments that are very effective.
Much of what I'm going to talk about next relates to the data and indeed the practice of
an incredible research scientist and clinician.
So this is Helen Blair Simpson, or I should say, Dr. Helen Blair Simpson, because she is
indeed an MD medical doctor, NAPHD research scientist at Columbia University School of Medicine.
And one of the world's foremost experts, if not the expert, I would put her in a category
of maybe just one to three people who is most knowledgeable about the mechanisms of OCD is actively researching OCD
in humans, trying to find new treatments, trying to unveil new mechanisms and expand on
our current understanding and who also treats OCD quite actively in her own clinic. Dr. Simpson gave a beautiful presentation in which she summarized some of the core elements
of CBT and exposure therapy for the treatment of obsessive compulsive disorders.
She describes that the key procedures are exposures, of course, done in person and with
the actual thing that evokes the obsessions and compulsions. So this could be the sweaty towel as described earlier,
or could be any number of different triggers done with the patient in real time.
So in vivo, as we say.
And it could also be things that are imaginal,
sitting somebody down in a chair in an office and saying,
okay, I want you to imagine the thing that triggers the intrusive thought.
Or let's just focus on the intrusive thought as it arises and then to explore and expose
the patient to their obsessions and compulsions that way.
So it can be real or it can be immaginal.
And the goal, of course, then is to gradually and progressively increase the level of anxiety
but then to intervene and so- called ritual prevention to prevent the person from
engaging in the compulsion. The goals, again, I'm paraphrasing here, are to, as she states,
disconfirm fears and challenge the beliefs about the obsessions and compulsions,
the intervene in the thoughts and the behaviors, and to break the habit of ritualizing and avoiding.
Now, how has this typically done? What are the nuts and bolts of this procedure?
Typically, this is done through two planning sessions
with the patient, so describing to the patient
what will happen and when it will happen
and how long it will happen,
so that you're not just thrown into this out of the blue.
And then 15 exposure sessions done twice a week or more.
So the one thing to really understand about cognitive behavioral therapy is that it can
take some period of time several or more weeks as many as 10 or 12 weeks.
However, as you'll soon learn, many of the drug treatments that are effective in treating
OCD either alone or in combination with behavioral therapies also can take 8, 10, 12 weeks or
longer and many of those never work at all.
So even though 10 to 12 weeks seems like a and many of those never work at all. So even though 10 to 12 weeks
seems like a long period of time,
it's actually pretty standard.
If you'd like to see more complete description
of the protocols for cognitive behavioral therapy
and exposure therapy for OCD,
I'll provide links to two papers,
Kozak and F0-F-O-A, which is published in 1997,
which might seem like a long time ago,
but nonetheless, the protocols are still very useful.
And then the second paper is by that last in 1997, which might seem like a long time ago, but nonetheless, the protocols are still very useful.
And then the second paper is by that last author faux et al in 2012, and we'll provide
links to both of those.
In addition, Dr. Blair Simpson and others have explored what are the best treatments for
patients with OCD by comparing cognitive behavioral therapy alone, placebo, so essentially no intervention,
or something that takes an equivalent amount of time,
but is not thought to be effective in treatment,
as well as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
So what is an SSRI, an SSRI is a drug
that prevents the reuptake of serotonin at the synapse.
What are synapses?
They're the little spaces between neurons
where neurons communicate with one another
by vomiting little bits of chemical into the space,
the synapse, and then those chemicals
either evoke or suppress the electrical activity
of the next neuron across the synapse.
And in this case, the neurotransmitter,
the chemical that we're referring to is serotonin.
SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, prevent the reuptake of the chemical that's
left, in this case, the serotonin that's left in the synapse after that, I call it vomiting
to be dramatic, but it's not actually vomiting.
The extrusion of the chemical into the synapse, and as a consequence, there's more serotonin
around to have more of an effect over time,
the net effect being more serotonergic transmission, more serotonin overall. So not more serotonin being made,
more serotonin being available for use. That's what an SSR ID does. So they compared
cognitive behavioral therapy, SSR ID, they also had the placebo placebo group and they had cognitive behavioral therapy. Plus,
the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor. This was a 12 week study done as described before, two times a week over the course of 12 weeks. First of all, the most important thing, of course,
placebo did nothing. It did not relieve the OCD to any significant degree, right? How did they
know that? They gave them the Y-box test that we talked about before.
The Yale Brown test with all those questions
of which I read a few.
So the OCD severity that one has to have on the Y-box
is measured in terms of an index that goes from here,
from eight all the way up to 28.
That shouldn't mean anything.
So the number eight is kind of meaningless here.
It's in terms of an index that's only only meaningful for the Y-box. But if somebody has a threshold
of 16 or higher, it means that they're still having somewhat debilitating symptoms or very
debilitating symptoms. Placebo did not reduce the obsessions or compulsions to any significant
degree. However, and I think quite excitingly, cognitive behavioral therapy had a dramatic effect in
reducing the obsessions and compulsions, such that by four weeks that score, that in this
case range from eight to 28, dropped all the way from 25 down to about 11.
So, there's a huge drop in the severity of the symptoms.
Now, what's really interesting is that when you look at the effects of SSRI drop in the severity of the symptoms. Now, what's really interesting is that when
you look at the effects of SSRIs in the treatment of OCD symptoms, they had a significant effect
in reducing the symptoms of OCD that showed up first at four weeks and then continued to
eight weeks. In fact, there was a progressive and further reduction in OCD symptoms from
the four to eight week period.
Again, these are the people just taking the SSRI.
And then it sort of flattened out a little bit
such that like 12 weeks,
there was still a significant reduction in OCD symptoms
for people taking SSRIs as compared to placebo.
But the severity of their symptoms
it was still much greater than those
receiving cognitive behavioral therapy alone.
So at least in this study, and I should tell you which study it is, still much greater than those receiving cognitive behavioral therapy alone.
So at least in this study, and I should tell you which study it is, this is FOE, Leibowitz
at all, 2005 in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
We'll also provide a link to this so you can peruse the data if you like.
But at least in this study, cognitive behavioral therapy was the most effective selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors less effective.
So what happens when you combine them?
Well, they explored that as well.
And the combination of cognitive behavioral therapy and the SSRIs together did not lead
to any further decrease in OCD symptoms.
This points to the idea that cognitive behavioral therapy is the most effective treatment.
And again, when I say cognitive behavioral therapy, now I'm still referring to cognitive
behavioral slash exposure therapy done in the way that I detailed
before, twice a week for 12 weeks or more.
So all of the data, at least in this study,
pointed the fact that cognitive behavioral therapy
is really effective, and the most effective,
does it alleviate OCD symptoms for everybody?
No, is it very time consuming?
Yes, twice a week for two sessions or more of 15 minutes
Sometimes in the office plus there's homework plus there can in an ideal case
There's also home visits from the psychiatrist or psychologist. That's a lot of investment a lot of time investment
To say nothing of the potential financial investment
Now Dr. Blair Simpson has given some beautiful talks where she describes these data and
also emphasizes the fact that despite the demonstrated power
of cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of OCD,
most people are given drug treatments simply
because of the availability of those drug treatments.
Now, when I say most people want to emphasize
that I'm referring to most people who actually
go seek treatment because a really important thing
to realize is that most people who actually go seek treatment because a really important thing to realize is
that most people with OCD do not actually go seek evidence-based treatment.
I want to repeat that.
Most people with OCD do not seek evidence-based treatment, which is a tragic thing.
One of the motivations for doing this podcast episode is to try and encourage people who
think they may have persistent obsessions and compulsions to seek treatment, but most people don't.
For a variety of reasons, we spelled out earlier, shame, et cetera.
Of those that do, the first line of attack is typically a prescription, most often an
SSRI, although not always just SSRIs, because soon we'll talk about the somewhat common use of also prescribing a low dose of a neuroleptic or an
anti-psychotic, not always, but often. So the important thing to understand here is that
excellent researchers like Dr. Simpson understand that while there are treatments that we could say
are best or are ideal based on the data, that doesn't necessarily mean that's what's being deployed
are ideal based on the data, that doesn't necessarily mean that's what's being deployed most often in the general public.
As a consequence, Dr. Simpson and others have explored in a very practical way whether
or not it matters if somebody is getting SSRI treatment and is experiencing that reduction
in OCD symptoms that as you may recall is more than what they would experience
with placebo alone, but not as dramatic a reduction in OCD symptoms as they would get
with cognitive behavioral therapy.
And as I mentioned before, there was this exploration of combining drug treatment, cognitive
behavioral therapy from the outset, but they also quite impressively explored what happens
when people who are already taking SSRI's initiate cognitive behavioral therapy.
This is a really wonderful thing that they've done this because in doing that, first of all,
they're acknowledging that there are many people out there who have sought treatment and
are getting some relief from those SSRI's, but it perhaps is not as much relief as they
could get.
They are actively acknowledging that many people are getting these drug treatments first. In fact, that many people are getting these drug treatments first.
In fact, most often people are getting
these drug treatments first.
So what happens when you add in cognitive behavioral therapy?
Well, the good news is when you add cognitive behavioral
therapy to someone who's already taking SSRIs,
that further improves their symptoms.
Now, that's different than the results that I described before from the same laboratory.
In fact, that if you combine cognitive behavioral therapy with SSRIs from the outset, there's
no additional benefit of SSRI.
However, as I just described, if someone is already taking an SSRI and they're experiencing
a reduction in their OCD symptoms. By adding
in cognitive behavioral therapy, there is a further reduction in the symptoms of OCD.
So, it's very important. So, for those of you that have sought treatment and you're taking
a SSRI, or if you're thinking about treatment and you're prescribed an SSRI, the ideal scenario
really would be to combine the drug treatment with cognitive behavioral therapy. Or in some cases maybe cognitive behavioral therapy alone, although that's a decision
that you really have to make with the close advice and oversight of a licensed physician,
because of course these are prescription drugs.
And anytime you're going to add or remove a prescription drug or change dose, that you
really want to do that in close discussion with and on the advice of your physician.
I want to just say that to protect me. I say that to protect you, and because it's just the right want to do that in close discussion with and on the advice of your physician? I don't just say that to protect me.
I say that to protect you and because it's just the right thing to do.
So again, cognitive behavioral therapy is extremely powerful.
Drug treatments seem less powerful, though.
If you're already on a drug treatment, adding cognitive behavioral therapy can really help.
So I've been talking about SSRIs and I described a little bit about how they work at a kind of
superficial level of keeping more serotonin in the synapse so that more serotonin can be inaction as opposed to gobbled back up by those neurons.
I should just mention what some of the selective serotonin reuptic inhibitors are.
So things like clomipramine, which is not entirely selective, I should say that that one generally
falls into a category of less selective, so it can
impair or
or can enhance some of the other neurotransmitter or neuromodulator systems like epinephrine etc.
The selective serotonin reupti inhibitors are at least the classic ones are fluoxetine,
prozac, fluvoxamine, fluvox peroxetine, searcherolene, satala pram, et cetera, et cetera.
There are about six or classic SSRIs.
Some of them like satala pram are used in children
and are available in pediatric doses.
Some like pro-Zach may or may not be used in children.
The details of which SSRIs, et cetera,
is a very extensive literature and discussion.
And I think it's safe to say that which drugs to use
and at which dosage and whether or not to continue,
excuse me, the same dosage over time depends a lot
on the individual variation that people express
and the responses that they have.
All of these drugs, in fact, I think we can say
all drugs have side effects.
The question is how detrimental those side effects are to daily life.
The SSRIs are well known to have effects on appetite.
In some cases, they abolish appetite.
In some cases, they just reduce it a little bit.
In some cases, they increase appetite, at least highly individual.
They can have effects on libido.
For instance, they can reduce sex drive, sometimes in the dose-dependent way, sometimes in a way that's more like a step function, where people are fine at, say, five or 10 milligrams, but then they get to 15 milligrams, and there's a cliff for their libido.
That can happen, it really depends. is as exact values, because this is going to depend on what they're being used for, depression or anxiety or OCD, and it's also going to depend on the drug, et cetera.
I just throughout those numbers as a way to illustrate what a kind of a step function would
look like.
It's not gradual.
It's immediate at a given dose is what that means.
The other thing is that some of these drugs will have transient effects, so side effects
that show up and then disappear, or sadly sadly people will sometimes take these drugs for a while
And then side effects will surface later that weren't there
Previously depending on life factors and nutrition factors, so it's a very complicated landscape overall
And that's why it's really important to explore any kind of drug treatment SSRI or otherwise
Really in close communication with a psychiatrist who really understands the pharmaconetics and has a lot of patient history and experience with them.
So what I'm about to tell you next is most certainly going to come as a big surprise,
which is that despite the fact that the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors can be effective
in reducing the symptoms of OCD, at least somewhat, and certainly more than placebo, there
is very little, if any, evidence that the serotonin system is disrupted in OCD.
And I have to point out that this is a somewhat consistent theme in the field of psychiatry.
That is, a given drug can be very effective or even partially effective in reducing symptoms
or in changing the overall landscape of a psychiatric disorder or illness.
And yet, there is very little, if any evidence, that that particular system
is what's causal for OCD or anxiety or depression, etc. This is just the landscape that we're
living in in terms of our understanding of the brain and psychiatry and the ways of treating
brain disorders. So as a consequence, there are a huge number of academic reviews that clinicians and research scientists have generated and read and share
one of the more I think
thorough ones in recent years was published in 2021. I'll provide a link to this. This is by an
excellent, truly excellent researcher from Yale University School of Medicine. I should say not
just a researcher, but a clinician scientist, again, an MD PhD. This is Christopher Pitinger, and the title of the review is,
Pharma, go through pharmacotherapeutic strategies and new targets in OCD.
And again, we'll provide a link to it.
As this is a just gorgeous review, describing, as I just told you,
that the serotonin system isn't really disrupted in OCD,
and yet, SSRIs can be very effective.
The review goes on to explore even what sorts of receptors for serotonin might be involved
if it's in fact the case that serotonin is a culprit in the creation of OCD symptoms.
Talk about the serotonin 2A receptor and the serotonin 1A receptor.
Why am I mentioning all that detail?
If in fact, it's not clear, serotonin is involved because I'll just tell you right now,
there is currently a lot of interest in whether or not some of the psychedelics in particular
psilocybin can be effective in the treatment of OCD. psilocybin has been shown in various
clinical trials. In particular, the clinical trials done at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
by Matthew Johnson and others. Matthew was on the Hubertman Lab podcast. He's been on the
Tim Ferriss podcast. He's been on the Lex Friedman podcast. He's a world-class researcher on
the use of psychedelics for depression and other psychiatric challenges. And there, psilocybin
treatment has been seen at least in those trials to be very effective in the treatment
of certain kinds of major depression. Currently, the exploration of psilocybin for the treatment of OCD
has not yielded similar results, although the studies are ongoing. Again, it has not yielded
similar effectiveness, but the studies are ongoing. And the serotonin 2A receptor and the serotonin
1A receptors are primary targets for the drug psilocybin. So I figured there were going to be some questions about whether or not psychedelics help with
OCD.
Thus far, it's inconclusive.
If any of you have been part of clinical trials or have knowledge or intuition about
this relationship or potential relationship, I should say, between psilocybin or other
psychedelics in OCD, please put them in the comment section.
We'd love to hear from you. One thing I should point out is that even though serotonin has not been directly implicated
in OCD, serotonin and the general systems of serotonin, the circuits in the brain that
carry serotonin and depend on it, have been shown to impact cognitive flexibility and
inflexibility, which are kind of hallmarked themes of OCD.
So in animals that have their serotonin depleted or in humans that have very low levels of serotonin,
you can see evidence of cognitive inflexibility, challenges in tasks switching, challenges
in switching the rules by which one performs a game, challenges in any kind of cognitive
domain switching.
And so that does indirectly implicate serotonin
in some of the aspects of OCD.
Again, when one starts to explore the different transmitter
systems that have been explored in animal models
and in humans, it's a vast, vast landscape,
but serotonergic drugs do seem to be the most effective drugs
in treating OCD despite the fact.
Again, despite the fact that there's no direct
evidence that the aerotonic systems are the problem in OCD.
If you recall the corticosteriotophilamic loop that is so central to the etiology, the
presence, and the patterns of symptoms in OCD, of course, serotonin is impacting that
system.
Serotonin is impacting just about every system in the brain, but there's no evidence that tinkering with serotonin level
specifically in that network is what's leading to the improvements in OCD. However, if people
go into a FMRI scanner and those people have OCD and they evoke the obsessions and compulsions,
you see activity in that corticosteriotophilamic loop,
treatments like SSRIs that reduce the symptoms of OCD
equate to a situation where there is less activity
in that loop.
And I should point out cognitive behavioral therapy,
which we have no reason to believe only taps
into the serotonin system.
I think it would be an extreme stretch.
It would be false, actually, to say
that cognitive behavioral therapy taps only into the serotonin system, I think it would be an extreme stretch. It would be false, actually, to say that cognitive behavioral therapy taps only into the serotonin system. Clearly,
it's going to affect a huge number of circuits in neurochemical systems. Well, people
who do cognitive behavioral therapy and find some relief for OCD, they also show reductions
in those corticosterietal philamic loops. So basically, we have a situation where we
have a behavioral therapy that works in many people, not all. And we have a situation where we have a behavioral therapy that works in many people,
not all, and we have a pretty good understanding of about why it works. It increases anxiety,
the tolerance, and interference with pattern execution, getting people to not engage in the same
sorts of behaviors that are detrimental to them. And we have drug treatments that work, at least to
some degree, but we don't know how they work or where they work in the brain.
One of the things that really unifies the behavioral treatments and the drug treatments is that they take some period of time.
Some relief from symptoms seems to show up around four weeks and certainly by eight weeks for both cognitive behavioral therapy and the SSRIs.
But it's really at the 10 to 12 week stage when someone's been doing these twice
a week cognitive behavioral sessions where they've been taking a SSRI for 10 to 12 weeks
that the really significant reduction in OCD symptoms starts to really show up.
Now, until now, I've been talking about the fact that people are getting relief from these
treatments, but sadly, in the case of OCD,
there is a significant population
that simply does not respond to CBT
or to SSRIs or to their combination,
which is why psychiatrists also explore the combination
of SSRIs and neuroleptics,
or drugs that tap into the so-called dopamine system,
or the glutamate system.
These are other neurotransmitters and neuromodulators that impact different circuits in the brain.
And just to really remind you what neurotransmitters and neuromodulators do, because this is important
to contextualize all this, neurotransmitters are typically involved in the rapid communication
between neurons.
And the two most common neurotransmitters for that are the neurotransmitter glutamate,
which we say is excitatory, meaning when it's released into the synapse, it causes the next neuron to be more active or active. And GABA, which is a neurotransmitter that is inhibitory, meaning when
it's released into the synapse, typically, not always, but typically, that GABA is going to encourage
the next neuron to be less electrically active or even silence its activity.
The neuromodulators, by contrast, so not neurotransmitters, but neuromodulators, like dopamine, serotonin,
epinephrine, and acetylcholine, and others, operate a little bit differently.
They intend to act a little bit more broadly.
They can act within the synapse, but they can also change the general patterns of activity
in the brain, making
certain circuits more likely to be active in other circuits less likely to be active.
So when we say dopamine does x or dopamine does y or serotonin does x or serotonin does y,
they don't really do one thing. They change the sort of overall tonality. They make it more
likely or less likely that certain circuits will be active. You can think of them as kind of
activating playlists or genres of activity in the brain, rather than being involved in the specific
communication or specific songs, if you will, in this analogy, or discussions between
particular neurons. So when we hear that SSRIs increase serotonin and reduce the symptoms
of OCD, or a neuroleptic reduces the amount of dopamine and makes people feel calmer,
for instance, or can remove some stereotype
repetitive motor behavior, which they can either generate
or reduce motor behavior, it turns out.
So when I say that, what I'm referring to
is the fact that these neuromodulators are turning up
the volume on certain circuits and turning down
the volume on certain circuits and turning down the volume on other circuits. I say that because if you are going to explore drug treatments,
again, with a licensed physician, if you're going to explore drug treatments for OCD and
in particular, if you are not getting results from SSRIs or you're not getting results from
cognitive behavioral therapy or the side effect profiles of the drugs that you're taking for OCD are causing problems that you don't want to take
them. Well, then it's important to understand that anytime you take one of these drugs, they're not
acting specifically on the corticosterietal phylamic circuit. That would be wonderful. That's the
future of psychiatry. But as now, when you take a drug, it acts
systemically. So it's impacting serotonin in your gut. It's also impacting serotonin
in other areas of the brain, hence the effects on things like digestion or libido or any
number of different things that serotonin is involved in. Likewise, if you take a neuroleptic,
like halopyridol or something that reduces dopamine transmission.
Well, then it's going to have some motor effects because dopamine is involved in the generation
of motor sequences and smooth limb movement.
That's why people with Parkinson's who don't have much dopamine will get a resting tremor
of a hard time generating smooth movement.
And so the side effects start to make sense given the huge number of different neural circuits
that these different norm modulators are involved in. I don't say that to be discouraging. I say that to encourage patients and careful systematic
exploration of different drug treatments for OCD, always again, with the careful and close
guidance and oversight of a psychiatrist chitress really understand which side effect profiles make it likely that you can or cannot or will never or maybe someday we'll be able to take a given drug
at a given dose.
They are the ones that really have that knowledge.
This is not the sort of thing that you want to cowboy and go try and figure out yourself.
Now I also want to acknowledge that there are other forms of drug treatments.
We touched on psilocybin briefly, but there are other forms of drug treatments
that have been explored for OCD.
Earlier, we talked a little bit about cannabis.
Why would cannabis be a place of exploration at all?
Well, first of all, a number of people try
and self-medicate for OCD.
There is some clinical evidence,
and I'm not talking about recreational use,
I'm talking about clinical evidence
that cannabis can reduce anxiety.
Earlier, we were talking about not reducing anxiety, but learning anxiety tolerance in order
to deal with and treat OCD in the context of cognitive behavioral therapies.
That doesn't necessarily rule out cannabis as a candidate for the treatment of OCD.
And in fact, this has been explored.
A study from Dr. Blair Simpson herself looked at this.
This was a fairly small scale study.
So first of all, I'll give you the title
and again, we'll provide a link.
This is entitled Acute Effects of Canabinoids
on Symptoms of Occessive Compulsive Disorder,
Human Laboratory Study.
Very briefly, this was 14 adults with OCD.
They had prior experience with cannabis.
This was randomized, placebo controlled.
The cannabis was smoked.
They had different varietals, as they're called.
They had a placebo.
So this is basically a condition in which certain subjects
consumed a cigarette that had 0% THC.
Others had 7% THC.
Other groups that is, or some had 0.4% CBD and THC, so they looked at CBD. I know a lot of people
out there are interested in CBD. There's one of the few studies I could find where they explored
different percentages of THC and CBD in these cannabis or marijuana cigarettes, basically.
The total amount that they consumed, I believe, was 800 milligrams. These again are not suggestions.
These are just simply reporting what's in this study. You can, again, I believe was 800 milligrams. These again are not suggestions. These are just
simply reporting what's in this study. Again, I'll provide a link. They looked at OCD symptoms ratings.
They looked at cardiovascular effects. They had a large number of different things that they explored.
And I should say this study was done in 2020. And it was the first placebo-controlled investigation
of cannabis and adults with obsessive compulsive disorder.
Pretty interesting.
And I'm just reading from their conclusions here.
The data suggests that smoked cannabis,
whether containing primarily THC or CBD,
remember they looked at different concentrations of those,
has little acute impact, meaning immediate impact
on OCD symptoms, and yields smaller reductions
in anxiety-com anxiety compared to placebo.
So they did not see, when I say a positive effect,
I mean a ameliorative effect, an effect in reducing
symptoms of OCD from cannabis or CBD, which,
it's unfortunate, I think it's unfortunate
any time a treatment doesn't work,
but nonetheless, those are the data.
I'm sure there are going to be other studies.
I'm sure there are also going to be people
in the YouTube comments section saying
that cannabis and CBD helps their OCD symptoms.
At least I anticipate they're probably will.
Almost everything I say here,
somebody will contradict it with something
from their experience, which I encourage, by the way,
I want to hear about your experience with certain things,
even if it's not from randomized,
placebo controlled studies,
I still find it very interesting to know what people are doing
and what they're experiencing.
I think that's one of the better uses
of social media comment sections
is to be able to share some of that,
not in an advice giving way or a prescriptive way,
but simply as a way to share
and encourage different types of exploration.
There are other sorts of drug treatments
that are gaining popularity for OCD,
at least in the research realm.
One treatment that is a legal, ledGAL, right?
Sometimes when I say legal, sometimes people think I say illegal, but that is legal, at
least by prescription in the United States, is ketamine.
The actions of ketamine are somewhat complex, although we know, for instance, that ketamine
acts on the glutamate system.
It tends to disrupt the transmission or the relationship, I should say, between glutamate,
right? Not glutamine, not the amino acid, but glutamate, the neurotransmitter, and the so-called NMDA,
the N-methodiaspartate receptor, which is a receptor that's very special in the nervous system,
because when glutamate binds to the NMDA receptor, it tends to offer the opportunity for that particular synapse
to get stronger so-called neuroplasticity.
And ketamine is essentially an antagonist,
although it works through a complicated mechanism.
It tends to block that binding of glutamate
to the NMDA receptor or the effectiveness of that.
Ketamine therapy is now being used quite extensively
for the treatment of trauma and for depression,
at least to a dissociative state.
It's a so-called dissociative analgesic.
And there are a variety of ways in which that happens.
We did an episode on depression.
We're going to do another entire episode all about ketamine, describing the networks that
ketamine impacts, et cetera.
Ketamine therapies are being explored for OCD.
As of now, the data look somewhat promising,
but there's still a lot more work that needs to be done.
My read of the data are that the more extensive clinical trials
have not happened yet, the smaller studies that have happened,
reveal that some patients do get some relief
from ketamine therapy for OCD,
but there was nothing overwhelmingly pointing to the fact that ketamine
is a magic bullet for OCD treatment.
So cannabis CBD, at least now, even though it's one smaller study, there's no real evidence
that it can alleviate OCD symptoms.
If there are new studies published soon, I'll be sure to update you.
And if you see those studies, please send them to me. Ketamine therapy, the jury is still out.
Siliciba, the jury is still out.
These are early days.
Another treatment that's becoming somewhat common,
or at least people are commonly excited about,
is transcranial magnetic stimulation.
So this is the use of a magnetic coil.
This is completely non-invasive.
Placed on one portion of the skull and one
can direct magnetic energy toward particular areas of the brain to either suppress or
now days you can also activate particular brain regions. There are some interesting data
showing that if TMS is applied to areas of the brain involved in the generation of motor
actions. So the so called motor areas or supplementary motor areas
as they're called, while people think about
or have intrusive thoughts,
we know that the TMS coil can interrupt
the motor behaviors, the compulsive behaviors,
and at least in a small cohort of studies,
in a small number of patients within those studies,
this has been shown to be effective,
not just while the coil is on the head, of course, but after the study has been performed,
the treatment has been performed in reducing OCD symptoms by disrupting the tendency for
the compulsive behavior to be so automatic.
One of the key features of obsessing compulsive disorder is that, especially if it's been around for a while,
the person's been dealing with it for a while.
There isn't a pattern in which the person thinks,
oh, I have this contamination fear
or I need symmetry or I'm kind of obsessed
to count to the number seven and then they pause
and they go, and then they do it.
No, typically there's a very close pairing
of the obsession and the compulsion in time so that somebody's walking down the street thinking 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 1, 2, 3, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8 And then they're generating the compulsion to the way to beat down or to try and suppress that anxiety. And then it comes right back up again at even stronger as I described earlier.
So transcranial magnetic stimulation seems to intervene in these very fast processes.
Right now, I don't think it's fair to say that TMS is a magic bullet either. I think there's
a lot of excitement about TMS and in particular, I really want to nail this point home. In particular,
about TMS and in particular, I really want to nail this point home. In particular, there's excitement about the combination of TMS with drug treatments or the combination of TMS with
cognitive behavioral therapy. And this is a really important point, not just for sake of discussion
about obsessive compulsive disorder, but also depression, ADHD, schizophrenia, any number of different psychiatric challenges and disorders.
In most cases, they're going to respond best to a combination of behavioral treatments
that's ongoing that occurs in the laboratory and clinical setting, but also in the home
setting where there's homework, maybe even home visits.
Drug treatments often not always are a terrific augment to those cognitive behavioral therapies
or other behavioral therapies.
And then now we are living in the age of brain machine interface.
You have companies like NeuralLink that I think it's fair to say are going to enter the
brain machine interface world first through the treatment of certain syndromes, right?
Movement syndromes or psychiatric syndromes, probably before they start putting electrodes
into the brain to stimulate enhanced memory or enhanced cognition.
Who knows?
I don't know exactly what they're doing behind the walls of Neural Link, but I have to
imagine, in fact, I would wager, maybe not both arms, but I'll wager my left arm, that
the first set of FDA-approved technologies to come out of companies like Neural Link
are going to be those for the treatment
of things like Parkinson's and movement disorders and cognitive disorders rather than, shall we
say, kind of recreational, cognitive enhancement or things of that sort.
So transcranial magnetic stimulation is non-invasive.
It doesn't involve going down below the skull.
Can have some effect, but most laboratories that I'm aware of at Stanford and elsewhere
are that are exploring TMS for things like OCD and other types of psychiatric challenges are
using TMS in combination with drug therapies are using in some cases for
instance laboratory at Stanford hope to get them on the podcast a psychiatrist
Nolan Williams is exploring TMS in combination with psychedelic therapies not
necessarily at the same time, but nonetheless combining them
or exploring how they impact brain circuitry.
So if you have OCD, should you run out and get TMS,
or should you try ketamine therapy,
of course, with a licensed physician?
I think it's too early to say yes.
I think the answer is we need to wait and see.
I think cognitive behavioral therapy, the SSRIs,
and some other drug treatments like
Neuraleptics combined with SSRIs anditive behavioral therapy, the SSRIs, and some other drug treatments like Neuraleptics combined with SSRIs and Cognitive behavioral therapy are where the real bulk of the data
are.
I want to make one additional point about cannabis CBD as it relates to obsessive
compulsive disorder.
To me, it's not at all surprising that cannabis CBD did not improve symptoms of OCD, because
in my discussion with Dr. Paul Conti a few weeks ago,
and as you mentioned, Dr. Conti is indeed a medical doctor, psychiatrist.
We were talking about cannabis and its various uses because it does have some clinical applications.
And he mentioned that one of the main effects of cannabis is to
tighten focus and to enhance concentration on
and thoughts about one particular thing.
And in some cases, that can be clinically beneficial
and in other cases, that can be clinically detrimental.
If you accept the idea that cannabis increases focus
and you think about OCD and the networks involved
and you think about the anxiety and the relationship
between the obsession and compulsion.
Well, then it shouldn't come as any surprise that cannabis did not improve the symptoms
of OCD because if anything, it would increase focus on the obsessions and the compulsions.
Now that's not what they observed.
They did not see an exacerbation or a worsening of the symptoms of OCD with
cannabis.
At least that's not my read of the data, but they did not see an improvement in OCD symptoms
with cannabis or CBD.
And to me, that's not surprising, given that cannabis CBD seems to increase focus.
Next I'd like to talk about some of the research on and the roles of hormones in OCD, because
it turns out to be a very interesting relationship
there.
But before I do, I want to point out something that I realized I probably should have said
earlier, which is one of the key things for someone with OCD to come to understand if they're
going to experience any relief of their symptoms, whether or not they're doing drug treatments
or behavioral treatments or otherwise, is that thoughts are not as bad as actions, right? Thoughts are not as bad as actions.
Right?
Thoughts are not as bad as actions.
One of the rules that people with OCD seem to adopt for themselves is that thoughts are
really, truly, the equivalent of actions.
So they'll have an intrusive thought, and we haven't spent too much time on this today,
but earlier I touched on the fact that some of the intrusive
thoughts that people have in OCD are really disturbing.
They can be really gross, or at least gross to that person.
They can evoke imagery that is toxic or infectious,
or is highly sexualized in a way that is disturbing to them.
Can be very taboo.
This is not uncommon when you start talking to people with OCD and you start pulling on
the thread.
Again, this would be a psychiatrist who was trained to ask the right questions and gain the
comfort and trust of a patient.
They start to reveal that these thoughts are really intrusive and kind of disturbing,
which is why they feel so compelled to try and suppress them with behaviors.
One of the powerful elements of treatment for OCD is to really
support the patient and make them realize that thoughts are just thoughts and that everyone
has disturbing thoughts. And that oftentimes those disturbing thoughts arise at the most
inconvenient and sometimes what seems like the most inappropriate circumstances. And this
relates to a whole larger discussion
that we could have about what are thoughts
and why do they surface?
And how come when you stand at the edge of a bridge,
even if you do not want to jump off,
you think about jumping off?
And this has to do with the fact that your nervous system
as a prediction machine is oftentimes testing possibilities.
And sometimes that testing goes way off
into the Netherlands of the
thought patterns and emotional patterns that we all have inside of us. The big difference
between a thought and an action is that, of course, the nervous system is in one case,
not translating those patterns of thinking into motor sequences. That nerdy way of saying thoughts aren't actions, believe
it or not can be helpful for people. If they really think about that and use it as an
opportunity to realize that, first of all, they're not crazy. They're not thinking and feeling
this stuff because they're bad or evil. And of course, sometimes this can cross over with
other other elements of life where we place moral
judgment on people for certain behaviors.
I think that's part of a healthy society, of course.
That's where we have laws and punishments and rewards for that matter for certain types
of behaviors.
But this idea that thoughts are not as bad as actions and that thoughts can be tolerated
and the anxiety around thoughts can be tolerated and over time can diminish.
That's a very powerful hallmark theme of the treatment of OCD.
So I'd be remiss if I didn't mention it. Thoughts are not actions. Actions can harm us. They can harm other people.
They can soak up enormous amounts of time. Thoughts can soak up enormous amounts of time. They can be very troubling.
They can be very detrimental. We of course want to be sensitive to that. But when it really comes down to it,
the first step in treatment for OCD is this realization
where the approach to the realization that thoughts are not as bad as actions.
So what about hormones in OCD?
Well, this has been explored. I'll be it not as extensively as I would have liked to find.
But when I went into the literature, I found one particularly interesting study
entitled Neurosteroid Levels in Patients with Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder for Sauthor Airbay,
and as always, we'll provide a link to the study.
The objective of this study was to explore serum
within blood, Neurosteroid Levels in people with OCD.
Why?
Because of the relationship between OCD and anxiety and
the fact that in stress-related disorders such as anxiety and depression, the hormones
have been extensively explored, but not so much in OCD, at least until this study. So,
they compared serum levels of a number of different hormones, progesterone, pregnant
alone, DHEA, cortisol, entestosterone. This was done in 30 patients with OCD
and 30 healthy controls.
So it's not a huge study,
but it's enough to draw some pretty nice conclusions.
These subjects were 18 to 49 years old,
and the controls were agents sex matched healthy volunteers,
again, no OCD.
What was the basic takeaway from the study?
The basic takeaway from the study was that in females with OCD, there was evidence for significantly elevated cortisol and DHEA.
Now that's interesting because cortisol is well known to be associated with the stress
system, although every day should mention we all male or female, everybody experiences
an increase in cortisol shortly after awakening. That's a healthy increase in cortisol. Late shifted, I mean, late, late in
the day peaks in cortisol, where a shift in that cortisol peak to later in the
day is a known correlates of depression and anxiety disorders. So the fact that
cortisol is elevated and DHA are elevated in female patients with
OCD, suggests that cortisol is either reflective of or causal for the increase in anxiety.
We don't know the direction of that effect.
Now in male patients with OCD, there was evidence for increased cortisol, again not surprising
given the role of anxiety in cortisol, or I should say, given the role of cortisol in anxiety and the increasing
anxiety seen in OCD.
But there are also significant reductions in testosterone, which should also not surprise
us because cortisol and testosterone more or less compete in some fashion for their
own production, both are derived from the molecule cholesterol
And there are certain biochemical pathways that can either direct that cholesterol molecule toward
cortisol synthesis or testosterone synthesis, but not both so they compete so when cortisol goes up in general
Not always but in general testosterone goes down and vice versa
If you want to learn more about the relationship between cortisol and testosterone and there are even some tools to try and optimize those ratios in both males and females, you
can find that in our episode on optimizing testosterone and estrogen. That's at hubermanlab.com.
Now I would say the most interesting aspect of this study is not that DHA and cortisol
are elevated in females with OCD or that cortisol and testosterone have this opposite effect cortisol up and testosterone down in males with OCD.
But rather the relationship between all of those DHA, cortisol and testosterone in terms
of GABA.
GABA again being this inhibitory neurotransmitter that tends to quiet certain neuronal pathways.
It does different things at different synapses,
but in general, the more GABA that's present,
the more inhibition that's present,
and therefore, the more suppression of neural activity.
And DHEA is known to be a potent antagonist
of the GABA system.
Okay, so here we have elevated DHEA in females and I should also mention
that testosterone is also known to tap into the GABA system. Typically when testosterone
is elevated GABA transmission at least is slightly elevated. So here we have a situation
in which the pattern of hormones in females and males with OCD are different from those
in people without OCD, such that GABA transmission is altered and the net effect would be an
overall reduction in GABA.
Now GABA as an inhibitory neurotransmitter and broadly speaking is associated with lower
levels of anxiety and it tends to create balance
within various neural circuits.
Now, that's a very broad statement, but we know, for instance, in epilepsy that GABA
levels are reduced and therefore you get runaway excitation of certain circuits in the brain
and therefore seizures, either petite mall, mini seizures or grand mall, massive seizures
or even drop seizures where people completely collapse to the floor in seizure.
You may have seen this before.
I certainly have, it's very dramatic,
and it actually is quite debilitating for people
because obviously they don't know when these seizures
are coming on most often, and then they can fall into a stove
or while driving, et cetera.
So the situation with OCD is one in which,
for whatever reason, we don't know the direction of effect.
Certain hormones are elevated in females, and certain hormones are elevated in which, for whatever reason, we don't know the direction of effect. Certain hormones are elevated in females and certain hormones are elevated in males and
those hormones differ between males and females.
And yet, they both funnel into a system where GABA-ERGIC, or GABA transmission in the brain,
is reduced because of this ability for those particular hormones to be antagonist to GABA.
And as a consequence, there's likely to be overall levels of increased excitation
in certain networks in the brain.
And that brings us back to this corticosteroetal themic loop.
This repetitive loop that seems to reinforce, or we can say,
reinforces obsession, leads to anxiety anxiety leads to compulsion leads to transient
relief of anxiety, but then increase in anxiety increased obsession anxiety compulsion anxiety
compulsion anxiety compulsion and so on and so forth.
So I have not found studies that have explored adjusting testosterone levels through exogenous
administration, cream or injection or otherwise,
or that have focused on reducing DHEA in females.
If anyone is aware of such studies, please put them in the comment section on YouTube or send
them to us.
We have a contact site on the website at hubrumelab.com, but the comment section on YouTube would
be best.
But because we know that hormones impact neuromodulators and neurotransmitters, as I just described, and
that those neuromodulators and neurotransmitters play an
intimate role in the generation and the treatment of things
like OCD, it stands to reason that manipulations of those
hormone systems, however subtle or dramatic might, I want to
highlight, might prove useful in adjusting the symptoms of OCD.
And I hope that this is an area that researchers are going to pursue in the very near future,
because many of the treatments for reducing DHEA or increasing testosterone or reducing cortisol
have already made it through FDA approval. They're out there, they're readily prescribed,
many of them are already in generic form, which means that the patents have already lapsed on the first versions of those drugs.
So when they're available, generic drugs, very often they're available at significantly
lower cost.
All right, there's a whole discussion we had there about patent laws and prescription drugs.
But because these drugs are largely available in prescription yet generic form, I think
there's a great opportunity to explore how hormones,
not just cortisol testosterone and DHA,
but the huge category of hormones
might impact the symptoms of OCD,
especially since many of the symptoms of OCD
show up right around the time of puberty.
We haven't talked a lot about childhood OCD
because we're going to do an entire series on childhood,
psychiatric disorders and challenges.
But many children develop OCD early, as young as three or four, believe it or not, or even
six or seven and 10, and in adolescence and certainly around puberty and in young adulthood.
It is rare, although it does happen, that people will develop OCD very late in life, around
40 or older, just kind of spontaneously.
Most often when you look at their clinical history, you find that either they were hiding
it or as being suppressed in some way, or if it does spontaneously show up late in life,
like mid 30s or in 40s, once 40s, typically there's a traumatic brain injury, could be due
to stroke or physical injury to the head or something of that sort.
Nonetheless, there is an interesting correlation between the onset of puberty in certain forms
of OCD. There are certain forms of, or I should say, there are certain aspects of menopause
that can relate to OCD. You can find all these things in the literature. All of this to
say that hormones impact neurotransmitters and neuromodulators, which clearly impact the
kinds of circuits that are involved in OCD. and it makes sense that, and I would hope that there would be
an exploration of how these hormones impact OCD in the not-too-distant future.
Now there is an extensive literature exploring how testosterone therapy, both in males and
females, can be effective in some cases in the treatment of anxiety related disorders, but not at least a
my knowledge in OCD in particular.
So this whole area of the use of testosterone and estrogen therapies, DHA, cortisol suppression
or maybe even enhancement for the treatment of OCD is essentially a big black box that
very soon I believe will be lit.
I realize that a number of listeners of this podcast are probably interested in the that very soon I believe will be lit.
I realize that a number of listeners of this podcast
are probably interested in the non-typical
or holistic treatments for OCD.
Dr. Blair Simpson's lab has at least one study exploring the role
of mindfulness meditation for the treatment of OCD.
There, the data are a little bit complicated and I should mention that
good things are happening at least in the United States, probably elsewhere as well. But good things
are happening in terms of the exploration of things like meditation and other, what's called a
nontraditional or holistic forms of treatment for psychiatric disorders because of the division
of complimentary health
that's now been launched by the National Institutes of Health.
So whereas before people would think about meditation or yoga, knee, draw, or even CBD supplementation
for that matter, as kind of fringe maybe or kind of woo or non-traditional, at the very
least, the National Institutes of Health in the United States has now devoted an entire division,
entire institute, purely for the exploration
of things like breathing practices, meditation, et cetera.
So there's a cancer institute,
there's a hearing and deafness institute,
there's a vision institute,
and now there's this complimentary health institute,
which I think is a wonderful addition
to the more traditional aspects of medicine.
I think no possible useful treatment should be overlooked
or unrecarched in my opinion provided
that can be done safely.
And as I mentioned, Dr. Blair Simpson's lab
has looked at the role of mindfulness meditation
in the treatment of OCD.
Now, we should all keep in mind, no pun intended, that most of the data on mindfulness meditation
shows that it increases the ability to focus. Now, this brings us back to a kind of repeating theme
today, which is that increased focus may not be the best thing for somebody with OCD,
because it might increase focus on the obsession and or compulsion.
Turns out that mindfulness meditation can be useful in the treatment of OCD,
but mainly by way of how it impacts the focus on and the ability to engage in cognitive behavioral therapies.
So it's very unlikely, at least by my read of the data,
to be a direct effect of meditation on relieving the symptoms.
Rather, it seems that meditation is increasing focus on things like cognitive behavioral
therapy homework and to not focus on other things and therefore indirectly improving the
symptoms of OCD.
Now, somewhat surprisingly, at least to me, there have also been a fairly large number
of studies exploring how neutrosutical, as they're sometimes called, supplements that
are available over the counter can impact the treatment of obsessive compulsive disorder.
Now there's such an extensive number of different compounds and supplements that fall under the
category of neutrosuticles and that have been explored in the treatment of OCD that I'd
like to point you to a review that is entitled neutrosuticles and the treatment of obsessive
compulsive disorder, a review, excuse me, of mechanistic and clinical evidence.
So it's published in 2011, so it's over 10 years old.
And so by now, I have to imagine that there are an enormous number of additional substances
that could be explored.
But they're just one or two here that I want to focus on.
Here in this review, they describe effects of 5-HTP and trip defense of things that are
in the serotonin pathway, which would make sense, given what we know about the SSRIs,
that people would explore how different supplements that increase serotonin-ergic transmission
might impact OCD.
What you find is that they do have significant effects in improving or reducing the symptoms
of OCD in somewhat similar reducing the symptoms of OCD
in somewhat similar way to some of the SSRIs.
But you of course have to be careful
anything that's gonna tap into a given neurochemical system
to the same degree may very likely
have the same sorts of side effects
that a prescription drug would.
One compound that I like to focus on
in a little more depth, however,
because it's exciting and interesting to me is inocetol.
Inocetol is a compound that we are going to talk about in several future podcasts because,
well, first of all, it seems that it can have impressive effects on reducing anxiety.
It also can have pretty impressive effects in improving fertility in particular in women
with polycystic ovarian syndrome.
And here I'm referring specifically to myoeinocytol
because it comes in several forms.
And it does appear that 900 milligrams of inocytol
can improve sleep and can reduce anxiety,
perhaps when taken at that dosage or higher dosages.
I will just confess, first of all, I don't have OCD,
although I will also confess that when I was a child,
I had a transient tick.
I've talked about this on podcast before. It was a grunting tick. So when I was about six or seven, I recall a trip to Washington, DC with my family,
where I was feeling a strong
desire or need even, as I recall, to
grunt in order to clear something in my throat, but I didn't have anything in my throat.
It was, I didn't have a cold or any post nasal drip.
It was really just the feeling that I needed to do that
to release some sort of tension.
And I remember my dad at the time telling me,
don't do that, don't do that.
It's not good to grunt or something like that.
I think he saw that it was kind of compulsive behavior.
And so I would actually hide in the back seat
of the rental car and do it, or I'd hide in my room.
Fortunately for me, it was transient.
I think about six months or a year later it disappeared.
Although I did notice, actually an ex-girlfriend of mine pointed out that when I get very tired
and I've been working very long hours, sometimes that grunting tick will reappear.
What does that mean?
Do I have Tourette?
I don't know.
Maybe.
I was never diagnosed with Tourette.
Do I have OCD?
Maybe.
I certainly could be accused of having obsessive,
compulsive personality disorder,
which we'll talk about still in a few minutes.
But the point here is that many children
transiently express ticks or low-level Tourette's
or OCD, and again, transiently,
and it disappears over time.
So inocital has been explored
in a bunch of different contexts,
including for ticks in
those CD, et cetera, going back to to inocital and its current use or actually say, my current
use, I've been taking 900 milligrams of inocital as an addition to my existing toolkit for sleep,
which I've talked about many times on this podcast and other podcasts consists of magnesium 3 and 8, Apaginian and Thienine. If you want to know more about that kit,
you can go to our newsletter, neural network newsletter at HubermanLab.com.
The tool kit for sleep is there. You don't even have to sign up for the newsletter,
but it'll give you flavor of the sorts of things that are in the newsletter.
In any case, I've been experimenting a bit with taking 900 milligrams of myo
inocital, either alone or combination
with that sleep kit.
And I must say the sleep I've been getting on in acetal is extremely deep and does seem
too lead to enhanced levels of focus and alertness during the day.
And perhaps you're noticing that because I'm talking more quickly on this podcast than
in previous podcasts.
No, I'm just kidding.
I don't think the two things related in any kind of causal way.
The point here is that in acetal is known to be pretty effective in reducing
anxiety, but when taking it very high dosages, can it do the same at low dosages? We don't
know. I would consider 900 milligrams a low dose, most of this given the fact that most
of the studies of inocetal have explored very high dosages, like even 10 or 12 grams
per day, which I must say seems
exceedingly high. And they do report that some of the subjects in those experiments actually stop
taking the inocital because of gastric discomfort or gastric distress as it's called. So I've
reported my results with sleep in a kind of anecdotal way. They certainly aren't peer-reviewed studies
that I described about my own experience in an anecdotal way.
But nonetheless, it's been explored that things like glycine, which is an amino acid, which
also acts as an inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, taken at very high dose of just
60 grams per day.
That is a absolutely astonishingly high amount of glycine.
I would not recommend taking that much glycine unless you're part of a study where they
tell you to and you know it's safe. 18 grams, excuse me, of inocetal.
These are very, very high dosages used in these studies. Nonetheless, there's some interesting
data about inocetal leading to some alleviation of OCD symptoms or partial alleviation of OCD symptoms in as little as two weeks after initiating
the supplement protocol. So I think there's a great future for these nitrosuticals, meaning I think
more systematic exploration in particular of lower dosages in the context of OCD treatment.
And as we saw before for the SSRIs and other prescription drug treatments, I think there really
needs to be an exploration
of these nutraceuticals in combination
with behavioral therapies and who knows,
maybe with brain machine interface
like training, cranial magnetic stimulation as well.
Now way back at the beginning of the episode,
I alluded to the fact that OCD is one thing,
obsessive compulsive disorder,
and it's truly a disorder,
and it's truly debilitating,
and it's extremely common.
And then there's this other thing called obsessive compulsive personality disorder, which is
distinct from that, does not have the intrusive component.
So people don't feel overwhelmed or overtaken by these thoughts.
Rather, they find that the obsessions can sometimes serve them, or they even welcome them.
And I think many of us know people like this.
I perhaps even could be accused or who knows, maybe have been accused of having an obsessive
compulsive personality at times.
Why do I draw this distinction?
Well, first of all, we've come to a point in human history, I think in large part because
of social media, but also in large part because there are a number of discussions being held about mental health
that have brought terms like trauma, depression, OCD, etc. into the common vernacular. So that people
will say, ah, you're so OCD or someone will say, I was traumatized by that or I was traumatized by this.
We should be very careful, right? I'm certainly not the word police, but we should be very
careful in the use of certain types of language, especially language that has real psychiatric and
psychological definitions, because it can really draw us off course in providing relief for some of
these syndromes. For instance, the word trauma is thrown around left and right nowadays. I was traumatized by this or that caused trauma.
You're giving me trauma.
Listen, I realize that many people are traumatized by certain events, including things that are
said to them.
I absolutely acknowledge that.
Hence, our episodes on trauma and trauma treatment, several of them, in fact, Dr. Conti,
Dr. David Speagle, and then dedicated solo episodes with just me
blabbing about trauma and trauma treatment.
But as Dr. Conti so appropriately pointed out, trauma is really something that changes
our neural circuitry and therefore our thoughts and our behaviors in a very persistent way that
is detrimental to us.
Not every bad event is traumatizing.
Not everything that we dislike or even that we hate or that feels terrible to us is traumatizing.
For something to reach the level of trauma, it really needs to change our neural circuitry
and therefore our thoughts in our behaviors in a persistent way that is maladaptive for
us.
Similarly, just calling someone obsessive is one thing,
saying that someone has OCD or assuming one has OCD
simply because they have a personality
or a phenotype as we say, where they need things
in perfect order, like I find myself correcting these pens,
making sure that the caps are facing in the same direction,
for instance, right now.
That is not the same as OCD.
If, for instance, I can tolerate these pens
being at different orientation
or even throw the cap on the floor or something.
It doesn't create a lot of anxiety for me.
I confess it creates a little bit in the moment,
but then I can forget about and move on.
That's one of the key distinctions
between obsessive compulsive personality disorder
and obsessive compulsive disorder in its strictest form.
Now, once one hears that OCD is different
than obsessive compulsive personality disorder
because of this difference in how intrusive the thoughts are
or not, then that's useful, but it really doesn't tell us
anything about what is happening mechanistically
in one situation or another.
Fortunately, there are beautiful data, again,
from Dr. Blair Simpson's lab, and you can tell based on the number of studies
that I've referred to from her laboratory,
there's truly one of the luminaries in this field,
that there really are some fundamental wiring differences
and behavioral differences and psychological differences
between people who have obsessive compulsive disorder
and those who have obsessive compulsive personality disorder.
So this is a study first author, Pinto Pinto Pinto,
entitled Capacity to Delay Reward,
Differentiates Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
and a Sessive Compulsive Personality Disorder.
And the methods in this study were to take 25 people
with OCD and 25 people with obsessive compulsive
personality disorder and 25 people who have both because it is possible
to have both. And that's important to point out. And 25 so-called healthy controls. People
that don't have obsessive compulsive personality disorder or obsessive compulsive disorder,
they take clinical assessments. And then they took a number of tests that probed their ability to
defer gratification, something called in the laboratory,
we call it delayed discounting.
So their ability to defer gratification
through a task where they can either accept reward
right away or accept reward later.
Some of you may have heard of the two marshmallow task.
This is a based on a study that was performed years ago
on young children at Stanford and elsewhere
where they take young children into a room.
They offer them a marshmallow, kids like marshmallows generally, and you say, you can eat
the marshmallow right now, or you can wait some period of time.
And if you are able to wait and not eat the marshmallow, you can have two marshmallows.
And in general, children want marshmallows more than they want, one marshmallow.
So really what you're probing is their ability to access delayed gratification and they're very entertaining, even truly
amusing
Videos of this on the internet. So if you just do two marshmallow task video and you go into YouTube what you'll find is that the children
We use all sorts of strategies to delay gratification
Some of the kids will
cover the marshmallow. Others will talk to the marshmallow and say, I know you're not
that delicious, you look delicious, but no, you're not delicious. They'll engage with the
marshmallow and all sorts of cute ways. They'll turn around and try and avoidance, which
actually speaks to a whole category of behaviors that people with OCD also use. I'm not saying
these kids at OCD, but avoidance behaviors are very much a component of OCD,
people really trying to avoid the thing that evokes the obsession.
Well, some kids are able to delay gratification, some aren't, and it's debatable as to whether
or not the kids that are able to delay gratification go on to have more successful lives or not.
Initially, that was the conclusion of those studies.
There's still a lot of debate about it.
We'll bring an expert on to give us the final conclusion on this because there
is one and it's very interesting and not intuitive. Nonetheless, adults are also faced with
decisions every day all day as to whether or not they can delay gratification.
And this study used a not a two marshmallow task, but a game that involved rewards where people could delay in order to get
greater rewards later. What is the conclusion? Well, first of all, obsessive compulsive and
obsessive compulsive personality disorder subjects both showed impairments in their psychosocial
functioning and quality of life. They had compulsive behavior. So these are people that are suffering in
their life because their compulsions are really strong. So it are people that are suffering in their life because their
compulsions are really strong. So it's not just being really nitpicky or really orderly in one
case and having full blown OCD and the other both sets of subjects are challenged in life because
they're having relationship issues or job related issues, etc. because they are that compulsive.
However, the individuals with obsessive compulsive personality disorder, they discounted
the value of delayed gratification significantly less than those with obsessive compulsive disorder.
What do I mean? They are both impairing disorders that are marked by compulsive behaviors.
Here I'm paraphrasing, but they can be differentiated by the presence of obsessions in OCD. So obsessions in OCD.
People with OCD are absolutely fixated on certain ideas and those ideas are intrusive.
Again, that's the hallmark theme.
And by an excessive capacity to delay reward in obsessive compulsive personality disorder.
That is, people who have obsessive personality disorder are really good at delaying gratification.
So they are able to concentrate very intensely and perform very intensely in ways that allow
them to instill order such that they can delay reward.
Now you can see why this contour of symptoms, meaning that the people with OCD are experienced intrusive
thoughts, whereas the people with obsessive compulsive personality disorder
show an enhanced ability to defer gratification. You could see how that would
lead to very different outcomes. People with obsessive compulsive
personality disorder can actually leverage that
personality disorder to perform better in certain domains of life. Not all domains of life,
because remember, again, these people are in this study, and they're showing up as experiencing
challenges in life because of their obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. Nonetheless, people with
obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, you can imagine would be very good at say
architecture or anything that involves instilling a ton of order, maybe sushi chef, for instance,
maybe a chef in general. I know chefs that just kind of throw things around like the
like the chef on the muppets and just like throwing things everywhere and still produce amazing
food and then there's some people who are there incredibly exacting. They're just incredibly
precise. I think that movie, what is it?
Hero Dreams of Sushi.
That movie is incredible.
I'm certainly not saying he has obsessive compulsive personality disorder, but I think
it's fair to say that he is obsessive or extremely meticulous and orderly about everything
from start to finish.
You can imagine a huge array of different occupations and life endeavors where this would be beneficial. Science being one of them,
where data collection and analysis
is exceedingly important that one be precise
or mathematics or physics or engineering.
Anything where precision has a payoff
and gaining precision takes time
and delay of immediate gratification.
You can imagine that obsessive-compulsive personality
or disorder would synergize well with those sorts of activities and professions.
Whereas obsessive compulsive disorder is really intrusive.
It's preventing functionality in many different domains of life.
So the key takeaway here is that when we use the words obsessive compulsive or we call
someone obsessive compulsive or we are trying to evaluate whether or not we are obsessive compulsive.
It's very important that we highlight that obsessive compulsive disorder is very intrusive.
It involves intrusive thoughts and it interrupts with normal functioning life.
Whereas obsessive compulsive personality disorder while it can interrupt normal functioning
in life, it also can be productive. It can enhance functioning in life,
not just in work, but perhaps at home as well. If you are somebody and you have family members that
really place enormous value on having a beautiful and highly organized home, well, then it could lend
itself well to that. It's going to be a matter of degrees, of course. None of these things is an
absolute. It's going to be on a continuum. But I think it is fair to say that obsessive compulsive disorder,
whether or not in mild, moderate, or severe form,
is impairing normal functioning.
Whereas obsessive compulsive personality disorder,
there's a range of expressions of that,
some of which can be adaptive,
some of which can be maladaptive,
and again, it's all going to depend on context.
Before we conclude, I do want to touch on something
that I think a lot of people experience,
and that's superstitions.
Superstitions are fascinating,
and there's some fascinating research on superstitions.
One particular study that I'm a big fan of
is the work of Benzo Alevsky at Harvard.
He studies motor sequences and motor learning,
and he has beautiful data on how people learn, for instance,
a tennis swing and the patterns that they engage in early on,
and then the patterns of swinging that they,
swinging the racket that is, that they engage in later
as they acquire more skill.
And basically the takeaway is that the amount of error
or variation from swing to swing
is dramatically reduced as they acquire skill.
That's all fine and good and there's some beautiful
mechanistic data that he and others have discovered to support how that comes to be.
But they also explore animal models in particular rats pressing sequences of buttons and levers
to obtain a reward.
Believe it or not, rats are pretty smart.
I've seen this with my own eyes.
You can teach a rat to press a lever for a pellet of food.
Rats can also learn to press levers in a particular sequence
in order to gain a piece of food.
And they can actually learn to press an enormous number of levers
in very particular sequences
in order to obtain pallets of food.
You can also give them little buttons to press, or even a pedal to, or I should say a pedal,
excuse me, to stomp on with their foot in order to obtain a pedal of food.
Basically rats can learn exactly what they need to do in order to obtain a piece of food,
especially if they're made a little bit hungry. First, Benz's lab has published beautiful data showing that as animals and humans come
to learn a particular motor sequence, very often they will introduce motor patterns in
that sequence that are irrelevant to the outcome and yet that persist.
If you've ever watched a game of baseball, you've seen this before.
Oftentimes the pitcher up on the mound will bring the ball to their chin, they'll look over their
shoulder, they'll look back over the other shoulder, and then they will, of course,
reel back and pitch the ball. But if you watch closely, oftentimes there are components in the
motor sequence, which are completely unrelated to the pitch. They're not looking necessarily to see if someone's stealing a base.
They're not necessarily looking down at home plate, where the batter is. They're also doing things
like touching the back of their ear before they bring the ball to their chin, or adjusting their hat.
And if you watch individual pictures, what you'll find is that they'll do the same sequence of completely irrelevant motor patterns before each and every single pitch.
Similarly, rats that have been trained to, for instance, hit two levers and step on a pedal
with their left hind foot and then tap a button up above, that is the red button,
we'll do that to gain a piece of food, but sometimes they'll also introduce a pattern
into that motor sequence where they will shake their tail a little bit
or they'll turn their head a little bit or they'll move their ears a little bit, etc.
Motor patterns that have nothing to do with obtaining the particular outcome in mind.
In other words, you could eliminate certain components of the motor sequence
and it would not matter the rat would still get the pellet.
The pitcher would still be able to pitch and yet that can introduce because somehow because
they were performed again and again prior to successful trials, the rat or the human baseball
pitcher comes to believe in some way that it was involved in generating the outcome, hence
superstition.
Right?
I confess, I have a few superstitions.
I occasionally will knock on wood.
I'll say something that I want to happen and I'll say, oh, knock on wood and I'll just
do it.
And occasionally I'll challenge myself and think, I don't want to knock on wood and
I don't do that.
You know, no one, I don't think anyone wants to be superstitious.
I certainly don't.
And so every once in a while, I'll just challenge it and I won't actually knock on wood.
I'm admitting this to you to kind of, um, I guess normalize some of this. Some people have
superstitions that border on or even become compulsions. They really come to believe that if they
don't knock on wood, that something terrible is going to happen maybe something in particular or
In the case of the baseball pitcher they come to believe that if they don't touch their right ear before they real back on the pitch
That the pitch won't be any good or that they're going to lose the game
Well, I don't know what their thought process is now
I also don't know what the rat is thinking but the rat is clearly doing something or thinking something is related
to the final outcome.
I don't know of any studies where they've intervened with the particular superstition
like behaviors of the rat to see whether or not the rat somehow doesn't continue to do
the motor sequence to get the pellet.
We don't know the rats.
I don't speak rat.
Most people don't or if you speak to a rat, if it speaks back, it's not in English.
Anyway, the point is that superstitions are beliefs
that we, on an individual scale, come to believe
are linked to the probability of an outcome.
When in fact, we know, we actually know
in our rational minds, they have no real relationship
to the outcome.
Superstitions can become full-blown compulsions
and obsessions when we repeat them often enough
that they become automatic.
And I think this is what we observe most of the time
when we see a picture touching their ear
or for instance in tennis you see this a lot,
you'll see they'll slap their shoes off and I see this.
They'll slap their under sides of their souls.
They may tell themselves that this is, I don't know, maybe moving out some of the dust
or something in the bottoms of their souls that gives them more traction and they want
that to be ready for the serve or something like that.
And maybe there's some truth to that.
But here what we're referring to are behaviors that really have no rational relationship to
the outcome.
And yet, we perform in a compulsive way.
People with OCD, yes, tend to have more superstitions.
People with more superstitions, yes, tend to have a tendency towards OCD.
And I should mention obsessive compulsive personality disorder.
If you think way back to the first part of this episode, when I was just describing
what the brain does, right, what does your brain do? How's keeping functions to keep you
alive? And it's a prediction machine. Your neural circuits, you have an enormous amount
of biological investment of real estate, literally cells and chemicals that are there to try
and make your world predictable and to try and give you control or at least the sense of
control over that world. And that's a normal process. Low level superstitions, moderate superstitions
represent a kind of a healthy range, I would say, of behaviors that are aimed at generating
predictability that don't disrupt normal function.
Obsessive compulsive personality disorder provided is not too severe.
I think represent the next level along that continuum.
And then obsessive compulsive disorder, as I pointed out earlier, is really a case of
highly debilitating, highly intrusive, really overtake of neural circuitry over our
thoughts and behaviors that requires it very dedicated,
very persistent and very effective treatments in order to stop those obsessions and compulsions
and the anxiety that links them somewhat counterintuitively by teaching people to tolerate that level
of increasing anxiety and interrupt those patterns. Unfortunately, as we described earlier, such treatments exist, cognitive behavioral therapy,
drug treatments like SSRIs, although also drug treatments that tap into the glutamate system
and into perhaps also the dopamine system, the so-called neuroleptics.
And then, as we described, there's now an extensive exploration of things like ketamine,
psilocybin, cannabis, the initial studies don't seem to hold much promise for cannabis and CBD
and the treatment of OCD, but who knows, maybe more studies will come along that will change that
story. And then of course brain machine interface like transcranial magnetic stimulation and then
just to remind you what I already told you before, combinations of behavioral and drug treatments
and brain machine interface, I think is really where the future lies. Fortunately, good treatments exist. We cannot say that any one
individual treatment works for everybody. There are fairly large percentages of people that won't
respond to one set of treatments or another, and therefore one has to try different ones. And then
there are the so-called supplementation
based or more holistic therapies.
Today I've tried to cover each and all of these
in a fairly substantial amount of detail.
I realize this is a fairly long episode.
That is intentional, much like our episode on ADHD,
on Attention Depth Superactivity Disorder,
I received an enormous number of requests
to talk about OCD. And my decision to make this a very long and detailed episode about OCD
really doesn't stem from any desire to subject you to too much information or to avoid
the opportunity to just list things off.
What I've tried to provide is an opportunity to really drill deep into the neural circuitry
and an understanding of where OCD comes from.
How OCD is different from things like the personality disorders that I described.
And also to give you a sense of how the individual behavioral and drug treatments work and perhaps
don't work so that you can really make the best informed choices.
Again, highlighting the fact that OCD is an extremely common, extremely common
and yet extremely debilitating condition. And one that I hope that if any of you have
or that you know people that have it, that you'll both gain sympathy and understanding
for what they're dealing with, perhaps as a consequence of some of the information presented
today and maybe help them direct their treatment, find better treatment, and of course, apply those treatments
for some relief.
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In closing, I'd like to thank you for this in-depth discussion about the mechanisms and various
treatments for obsessive-compulsive disorder and some of the related disorders.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.
you