OCD through the Lens of HiTOP — Not a Disorder in Isolation, but Part of a Spectrum

Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder (OCD) has long been placed under anxiety disorders (DSM-IV), and later reclassified into its own category (DSM-5: Obsessive–Compulsive and Related Disorders).
But even this separation doesn’t fully explain:

  • Why OCD often exists with anxiety and depression

  • Why some OCD patients are perfectionistic, guilt-driven — while others are impulsive or tic-related

  • Why intrusive thoughts resemble ruminations in depression, or obsessions in personality disorders

  • Why brain imaging shows overlaps between OCD, anxiety, and trauma

This is where HiTOP offers a clearer, dimensional perspective.

📍 Where Does OCD Fit in HiTOP?

HiTOP does not see OCD as a standalone disorder. It is part of the Internalizing Spectrum, particularly under the “Fear & Distress (Anxious-Misery)” subfactor.

Hierarchy View (HiTOP structure):

Level Where OCD Fits
Symptom Level Obsessions (intrusive thoughts), compulsions (rituals), checking, contamination fears
Syndrome Level OCD (as a clinical diagnosis)
Subfactor Level Fear & Distress Disorders (along with panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, illness anxiety)
Spectrum Level (Broad) Internalizing Spectrum — includes Depression, Anxiety, OCD, PTSD, Eating Disorders
p-Factor (General) Shared vulnerability to all mental disorders

So OCD isn’t separate — it’s part of a wider internal distress system in the brain.

🧠 Why This Matters: Understanding the “Type” of OCD

HiTOP helps explain why OCD is not one disorder, but has different profiles:

OCD Variant HiTOP-Relevant Traits Typical Brain/Cognitive Patterns
Classic Fear-Based OCD (contamination, checking) High internalizing, high fear, harm avoidance Hyperactivity in cortico-striatal-thalamic loops
Scrupulosity/Guilt OCD Distress + perfectionism + moral sensitivity Overactive error-detection (ACC)
Pure-O / Rumination type Internalizing + depression + worry loops Similar to GAD + depressive rumination
OCD + Tics / Impulsive Subtype Mix of internalizing + externalizing + motor disinhibition Linked to Tourette’s / ADHD overlaps
OCD + Personality Traits (perfectionistic, rigid, anxious attachment) OCD + Obsessive–Compulsive Personality + Harm avoidance Higher anxiety + rigidity; low flexibility

💥 Why OCD Often Comes with Anxiety, Depression, Eating Disorders

Under HiTOP, this is not comorbidity but shared spectrum vulnerability.

Internalizing Spectrum =

  • Fear-based conditions → Phobias, Panic Disorder, OCD

  • Distress-based conditions → Depression, GAD, PTSD

  • Body-related → Somatic anxiety, eating disorders

This explains why:
✔ 70% of OCD patients also have anxiety
✔ 50–60% have depression at some point
✔ Perfectionistic teen with OCD may later develop anorexia or social anxiety
✔ Stress worsens all internalizing conditions, not just OCD

🩺 Clinical Implications: How HiTOP Helps Us Treat OCD Better

Traditional View HiTOP-Informed View
“This is OCD. Let’s treat obsessions & compulsions.” “This person lies high on the internalizing spectrum with fear-driven compulsions, trauma sensitivity, and depressive rumination.”
Focus only on ERP (Exposure & Response Prevention) Combine ERP + emotional regulation + treat depressive/intrusive rumination components
Separate OCD from personality traits See perfectionism, moral rigidity, guilt as dimensional modifiers
Anxiety + OCD = two diagnoses Actually part of the same spectrum — one treatment plan, not fragmented

🎯 Treatment Approach (HiTOP-Aligned OCD Management)

First — Identify the dominant spectrum features:
– Fear-dominant? Depressive-dominant? Trauma-linked? Tic-related?

Then personalise therapy:

Spectrum Influence Add-On Treatment
High Fear/Compulsions ERP (Exposure & Response Prevention)
High Distress/Depression CBT + SSRI + Rumination-focused therapy
Perfectionism/Morality OCD Schema Therapy / Compassion-Focused Therapy
Tic-related / Externalizing OCD Combine ERP + habit reversal + possibly dopamine blockers

⚖️ Final Thought

HiTOP helps us see OCD not as a box but as a spectrum experience within a larger emotional system. It removes artificial boundaries and helps us treat people, not labels.

👨‍⚕️ Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T

MD (AIIMS), DNB, MBA
Consultant Psychiatrist — Mind & Memory Clinic
Apollo Clinic, Velachery (Opp. Phoenix MarketCity), Chennai
📞 +91-8595155808 | 🌐 www.srinivasaiims.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *