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Re: Biopsychosocial vs Biological Reductionism » Estella

Posted by yxibow on August 30, 2006, at 18:32:18

In reply to Re: Biopsychosocial vs Biological Reductionism » yxibow, posted by Estella on August 30, 2006, at 2:49:12

> Hellos :-)
>
> > A true program always integrates psychodynamic, behavioural, and other forms of psychological therapy adjunctive to medication... the medication which makes life livable enough to deal with the psychological and perhaps even environmental factors that triggered a brain chemical disorder.
>
> Yeah. Biopsychosocial model. (Biology, psychology, socio-cultural). Some add a spiritual dimension but I haven't seen a convincing line drawn between psychology and spirituality so... I guess that is right. Some reductionists, however, think that biology is the fundamental level. If it doesn't target biology then there is little point to it.
>
> But yeah, that doesn't seem right...
>
> The scan studies are interesting. Do you have references? It is hard to know whether the neurology is merely correlated with the behavioural dysfunction (and hence wouldn't be a candidate for a causal mechanism) or whether it occurs prior to behavioural change.


References -- certainly, the doctors have moved on since to private practice as well, but you can see some of the old images here

http://hope4ocd.com/overview.php

http://www.brainmattersinc.com/ocd.html


These have no references attached but I can say that I have seen these many times. The color images are probably in more older journals such as

Brain imaging as a tool in establishing a theory of brain pathology in obsessive compulsive disorder.
J Clin Psychiatry. 1990 Feb;51 Suppl:22-5; discussion 26.

J Clin Psychiatry. 1994 Oct;55 Suppl:54-9. Links
Positron emission tomography studies of cerebral glucose metabolism in obsessive compulsive disorder.

* Baxter LR Jr.

Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences.

"In the last 7 years, positron emission tomography (PET) scanning studies of obsessive compulsive disorder have given us new insights into misfunctionings of brain systems that may mediate the symptomatic expression of this classical "neurosis." Work by several PET groups indicates that a prefrontal cortex-basal ganglia-thalamic circuit may be the brain pathway leading to the broken record patterns of obsessions and compulsions."

And ongoing research continues

http://www.mentalhealth.ucla.edu/projects/anxiety/ocdresearch.htm


So while I can't put an old glossy Grand Rounds or journal link here, there are many references to PET scans of OCD pointing at the caudate nucleus.

-- J

 

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