Abstract

Positive psychotic symptoms are reported to be associated with high, negative symptoms with low dopamine (DA) activity and serotonin (5HT) activity may be altered in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). We analysed 24 h urine samples in these patient groups and in healthy controls for supportive evidence. Young unmedicated OCD subjects excreted more adrenaline (AD) and homovanillic acid (HVA) and showed a higher HVA/MHPG ratio and metabolic rate than healthy controls. Independent of general metabolic rate they showed higher HVA concentrations which suggests that the relative activity of catecholamine systems in OCD (HVA/MHPG) is due more to high DA than to low noradrenergic (NA) activity. Concentrations of 5HT were also high in OCD patients. In psychotic patients low levels of DA, HVA, NA and MHPG probably resulted from neuroleptic medication. Patients diagnosed with paranoid psychosis showed higher DA utilization than controls and those with few paranoid symptoms showed high 5HT utilization. These results support studies suggesting that paranoid psychosis is associated more with increased DA activity (discussed in the context of neuroleptic reactivity), that non-paranoid forms are associated more with increased 5HT activity and that OCD patients are unusually aroused with high levels of Ad, 5HT and HVA.

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