Abstract

Impaired response inhibition has been consistently reported in patients diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This clinically heterogeneous disorder is characterized by several symptom dimensions that may have distinct, but partially overlapping, neural correlates. The present study examined whether alterations in response inhibition may be related to symptom severity and symptom dimensions. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in a group of 42 medication-free OCD patients as well as 42 healthy controls during a stop-signal task. Symptom dimension scores were obtained using the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale symptom checklist. OCD patients showed longer stop-signal reaction times (SSRT, p < 0.01) and larger stop-N2 amplitudes (p < 0.01) compared to healthy controls. Neither the longer SSRT nor the larger stop-N2 scores were significantly correlated with symptom severity or present or lifetime OCD symptoms in OCD patients. These results indicate that deficient response inhibition is a common occurrence in OCD patients that is independent of global symptom severity and symptom dimensions. These data support the notion that impaired response inhibition may be a general attribute of patients with OCD.

Highlights

  • Following factors: taboo, contamination/cleaning, doubts, superstitions/rituals, and symmetry/hoarding[3]

  • We found that the impaired response inhibition found in patients was independent of the severity of their Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), as well as depressive, symptoms

  • We show that patients with OCD display longer latencies of the stop process (SSRT) compared to healthy controls

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Summary

Introduction

Following factors: taboo, contamination/cleaning, doubts, superstitions/rituals, and symmetry/hoarding[3]. A significant main effect of group was observed (F(1,82) = 9.84, p < 0.01, η2 = 0 .11) indicating that patients with OCD had larger (more negative) N2 amplitudes compared to healthy control participants. In the OCD patient sample, neither SSRT nor amplitude or latency of the N2/P3 elicited in response to the stop signal was significantly correlated with YBOCS, OCI-R, or BDI-II scores.

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