• Title of article

    The familial phenotype of obsessive-compulsive disorder in relation to tic disorders: the Hopkins OCD family study

  • Author/Authors

    Marco A. Grados، نويسنده , , Mark A. Riddle، نويسنده , , Jack F. Samuels، نويسنده , , Kung-Yee Liang، نويسنده , , Rudolf Hoehn-Saric، نويسنده , , O. Joseph Bienvenu، نويسنده , , John T. Walkup، نويسنده , , DongHo Song، نويسنده , , Gerald Nestadt، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    559
  • To page
    565
  • Abstract
    Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders have phenomenological and familial-genetic overlaps. An OCD family study sample that excludes Tourette’s syndrome in probands is used to examine whether tic disorders are part of the familial phenotype of OCD. Methods: Eighty case and 73 control probands and their first-degree relatives were examined by experienced clinicians using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Anxiety version. DSM-IV psychiatric diagnoses were ascertained by a best-estimate consensus procedure. The prevalence and severity of tic disorders, age-at-onset of OCD symptoms, and transmission of OCD and tic disorders by characteristics and type of proband (OCD + tic disorder, OCD − tic disorder) were examined in relatives. Results: Case probands and case relatives had a greater lifetime prevalence of tic disorders compared to control subjects. Tic disorders spanning a wide severity range were seen in case relatives; only mild severity was seen in control relatives. Younger age-at-onset of OCD symptoms and possibly male gender in case probands were associated with increased tic disorders in relatives. Although relatives of OCD + tic disorder and OCD − tic disorder probands had similar prevalences of tic disorders, this result is not conclusive. Conclusions: Tic disorders constitute an alternate expression of the familial OCD phenotype.
  • Keywords
    Obsessive-compulsive disorder , Family study , Tic disorders , Tourette’s syndrome
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Record number

    501590