OCD in Children and Adolescents

On this page

Pediatric OCD: Core Concepts - Tiny Worries, Big Impact

  • Prevalence: Affects ~1-2% of children and adolescents.
  • Age of Onset: Bimodal peaks at 7-8 years and early adolescence.
  • Gender Ratio: Boys > Girls in childhood; ratio evens out in adolescence.
  • Common Obsessional Themes:
    • Contamination (germs, dirt)
    • Harm (to self or others)
    • Symmetry, ordering, exactness
    • Scrupulosity (religious/moral)
  • Impact: Causes significant distress, impairs academic/social development, and strains family functioning. The OCD Cycle

⭐ PANDAS (Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections) can cause sudden, severe OCD onset post-strep infection.

Spotting OCD: Signs & Symptoms - Little Rituals, Loud Alarms

Common Signs of OCD in Children

  • Common Obsessions (Intrusive Thoughts/Images):
    • Contamination (germs, dirt)
    • Harm (to self/others)
    • Scrupulosity (religious/moral worries)
    • Sexual thoughts (unwanted)
    • Symmetry/Exactness needs
  • Common Compulsions (Repetitive Behaviors/Mental Acts):
    • Washing/Cleaning
    • Checking (locks, homework)
    • Repeating (actions, phrases)
    • Ordering/Arranging
    • Mental compulsions (counting, praying)
  • Key Differences from Adult OCD:
    • ↓ Insight (may not see rituals as excessive)
    • ↑ Magical thinking (vs. adults)
    • Ego-syntonic initially (rituals feel "right," less initial distress)
    • ↑ Family involvement/accommodation (parents may enable rituals)

⭐ Family accommodation of rituals is common in pediatric OCD and can inadvertently maintain symptoms, often becoming a target for intervention.

Diagnosing Kiddie OCD: The Full Picture - Puzzle Pieces Together

Error: Failed to generate content for this concept group.

Treating Young Minds: Meds & More - Gentle Steps, Strong Support

  • Core: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with Exposure & Response Prevention (ERP) is first-line; family involvement crucial.
  • Meds: SSRIs for moderate-severe or CBT-refractory OCD.
    • Fluoxetine: Start 5-10mg, target 20-60mg/day. (FDA approved)
    • Sertraline: Start 25mg, target 50-200mg/day. (FDA approved)
    • Fluvoxamine: Start 25mg, target 50-200mg/day (up to 300mg). (FDA approved)
    • Paroxetine: Also used.
    • Titrate slowly; continue ≥12 months post-remission.
  • Boost: Augment with low-dose risperidone for partial/no SSRI response.
  • ⚠️ Watch: SSRI side effects (GI, sleep); ↑ suicidality risk (<25 yrs) - Black Box Warning.

⭐ Fluoxetine, Sertraline, and Fluvoxamine are the SSRIs with FDA approval for pediatric OCD.

Course & Comorbidities: The Long Haul - Navigating Rough Waters

  • Course: Often chronic; waxing/waning symptoms.
  • Prognosis: Worse with early onset, severity, family accommodation, comorbidities.
  • Common Comorbidities:
    • Anxiety (SAD, GAD), ADHD, Tics (Tourette's), Depression, Disruptive behavior.
    • ⭐ > Tic disorders (e.g., Tourette's) co-occur in ~30-50% of pediatric OCD cases.
  • Impact: Affects academic, social, family life.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Early onset is common (mean ~10 yrs), with boys often presenting earlier; family-related themes are frequent in obsessions.
  • Family accommodation of rituals is a significant factor that can maintain symptoms and impact treatment.
  • High rates of comorbidity, especially with ADHD, anxiety disorders, and tic disorders (particularly Tourette syndrome in boys).
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), specifically Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), is the first-line treatment.
  • SSRIs (e.g., fluoxetine, sertraline, fluvoxamine) are the first-line pharmacotherapy; clomipramine is a potent second-line option.
  • Consider PANDAS/PANS in cases of acute, dramatic onset of OCD symptoms following an infection (e.g., streptococcal).
Rezzy AI Tutor

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, our AI tutor, to explain anything you didn't understand

Practice Questions: OCD in Children and Adolescents

Test your understanding with these related questions

Drug most useful in the treatment of obsessive compulsive disorder is

1 of 5

Flashcards: OCD in Children and Adolescents

1/9

In OCDs there is a(n) _____ in dopamine levels

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

In OCDs there is a(n) _____ in dopamine levels

increase

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start For Free
OCD in Children and Adolescents - Free Indian Medical PG