Abstract

A growing body of research has revealed robust associations between disgust and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms. The present study aimed to understand if particular disgust domains are more closely associated with OC symptoms subscales, especially contamination and washing. A sample of 60 OCD patients from an outpatient Iranian psychiatric clinic completed self-report questionnaires including the Disgust Scale-Revised (DS-R), the Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Revised (OCI-R) and the Padua inventory-Washington State University revision (PI- WSUR). The results indicated correlations between the total, core and contamination subscales of the DS-R together with the OCI-R total score as well as with the PI-WSUR total score. However, no correlation was found between these inventories and the DS-R animal reminder subscale. The DS-R total score also correlated with the washing and checking subscales of the OCI-R and with the contamination obsessions and washing and checking compulsions of the PI-WSUR. The relationship between disgust and demographic characteristics showed that the DS-R total, core and contamination scores were significantly higher for women and married subjects, and that the animal reminder subscale score was significantly higher for women than men. Although symptoms presentation, risk factors, and outcomes may vary cross-culturally, very little is known about disgust emotion as an OCD symptom in Iranian and eastern cultures. Additional work is needed to better understand these symptoms in other eastern cultures.

Highlights

  • Disgust is an emotion typically associated with things that are considered dirty, unappetizing, contagious, or otherwise offensive (Olatunji, Sawchuk, Arrindel, & Lohr, 2005)

  • The Disgust Scale-Revised (DS-R) total score (0.264) and the core (0.254) and contamination (0.314) subscales scores were associated with Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Revised (OCI-R) total score

  • DS-R total score correlated with OCI-R checking (0.272) and washing subscales (0.284), and total and subscales showed rather high correlations with Padua inventory-Washington State University revision (PI-WSUR) total and subscales scores

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Summary

Introduction

Disgust is an emotion typically associated with things that are considered dirty, unappetizing, contagious, or otherwise offensive (Olatunji, Sawchuk, Arrindel, & Lohr, 2005). Several descriptive researches highlight a positive association between self-report measures of disgust and OCD-related contamination concerns (Moretz & McKay, 2008; Olatunji et al, 2010; Sawchuk, Lohr, Tolin, Lee, & Kleinknecht, 2000). Washing and checking behaviors were significantly and uniquely predicted by disgust sensitivity for both men and women. Other recent studies have found significant associations between disgust proneness and a range of OCD symptoms such as hoarding, neutralizing, and ordering (Olatunj et al, 2010; Olatunji, Cisler, McKay, & Phillips, 2010). In a study of Olatunji et al (2007), disgust factors were significantly related scores of contamination fears and obsessive-compulsive symptoms ( washing, ordering and checking symptoms)

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