AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurocognitive issues, particularly in response inhibition and sustained attention, are prevalent in children and youth with OCD, but these have not been extensively studied before.
  • A study involving various groups of OCD and typically developing children found that those with clinical OCD showed poorer performance on tasks measuring cognitive functions compared to their peers, especially among younger participants.
  • The findings suggest that even those with high OCD traits but without a diagnosis demonstrate similar cognitive impairments, highlighting the need for more awareness and recognition of OCD symptoms in youth.

Article Abstract

Background: Neurocognitive impairments are common in OCD, although not well studied in children and youth with the disorder.

Method: Using the stop-signal task (SST), we measured response inhibition (stop-signal reaction time-SSRT), sustained attention (reaction time variability-RTV), reaction time (RT), and performance monitoring (post-error slowing-PES) in OCD cases and controls from two samples of children and youth. A Clinic OCD group (n = 171, aged 7-17 years) was recruited from a specialty clinic after rigorous assessment. A typically developing (Clinic TD, n = 157) group was enlisted through advertisement. A community OCD sample (Community OCD, n = 147) and controls (Community TD n = 13,832, aged 6-17 years) were recruited at a science museum. We also identified a community group with high OCD traits without an OCD diagnosis (Community High Trait; n = 125).

Results: Clinic OCD participants had longer SSRT and greater RTV than Clinic TD. These effects were greater in younger OCD participants and, for SSRT, in those on medication for OCD. The Community OCD group did not differ from Controls but was similar to the Clinic OCD group in ADHD and ASD comorbidity and medication usage. The Community High Trait group had longer SSRT and atypical PES suggesting that symptom severity predicts neurocognitive function. No group differences were found in RT.

Conclusions: In the largest study of neurocognitive performance in children with OCD to date, we found impaired response inhibition and sustained attention in OCD participants in comparison to typically developing peers. Performance was worse in younger OCD participants. In the community sample, participants with high OCD trait scores but no OCD diagnosis had impaired response inhibition and error processing, suggesting that OCD might be under-recognized.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.13533DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ocd
18
ocd participants
16
children youth
12
response inhibition
12
clinic ocd
12
ocd group
12
community ocd
12
community
9
neurocognitive function
8
sustained attention
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!