What do you think this may be?!


Question: What do you think this may be!?
I have a friend who does really strange things!. after he ties his shoe laces he always has to snap his fingers 5 or 6 times!.

when he opens anything like the refrigerator or a cabinet or anything that you open he has to rub the handle several time

this one is hard to describe!. any time he turns on a light switch he moves his head up and down and side to side several times!.

he does this weird stuff and it bothers me and I always ask him why do you do stuff like that and he will not answer me!.

every day he adds something new!. I have known him for about 20 year's and he never did stuff like this, I started to notice him doing this about three years ago but each year is getting worse!.

Does anyone know what this may be, he won't talk to me about it and it really bothers the heck out of me, its very annoying because he does this every single day and night!.






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Answers:
This is DEFINITELY OCD- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder!.
It's not something you're born with, and it can be treated!.

http://en!.wikipedia!.org/wiki/OCDWww@Answer-Health@Com

This sounds like Obsessive compulsive disorder!.!.!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

classic signs of OCDWww@Answer-Health@Com

obsessive compulsive disorder-family history and chemical imbalances in the brain are thought to contribute to the development of the illness!. Generally, while people who have relatives with OCD are at a higher risk of developing the disorder, most people with the illness have no such family history!. A specific chromosome/gene variation has been found to possibly double the likelihood of a person developing OCD!. It is thought that an imbalance of the chemical serotonin in the brain may also contribute to the development of OCD!. Most individuals with OCD experience some symptoms of the disorder indefinitely, with times of improvement alternating with times of difficulty!. However, the prognosis is most favorable for OCD sufferers who have milder symptoms that last for less time and who have no other problems before developing this illness!. Ritual prevention involves a mental-health professional helping the OCD sufferer to endure longer and longer periods of resisting the urge to engage in compulsive behaviors!. Exposure therapy is the process by which the individual with OCD is put in touch with situations that tend to increase the OCD sufferer's urge to engage in compulsions, then helping him or her resist that urge!. Cognitive/behavioral therapists help patients change the negative styles of thinking and behaving that are often associated with the anxiety involved with obsessive compulsive disorder!. (SSRIs) are the medications that are most commonly used to treat OCD!. These medications increase the amount of the neurochemical serotonin in the brain!. (Remember that brain serotonin levels are thought to be low in OCD!.) As their name implies, the SSRIs work by selectively inhibiting (blocking) serotonin reuptake in the brain!. This block occurs at the synapse, the place where brain cells (neurons) are connected to each other!. Serotonin is one of the chemicals in the brain that carries messages across these connections (synapses) from one neuron to another!.

The SSRIs work by keeping serotonin present in high concentrations in the synapses!. These drugs do this by preventing the reuptake of serotonin back into the nerve cell that is transmitting an impulse!. The reuptake of serotonin is responsible for turning off the production of new serotonin!. Therefore, the serotonin message keeps on coming through!. It is thought that this, in turn, helps arouse (activate) cells that have been deactivated by OCD, thereby relieving the symptoms of the condition!.

SSRIs have fewer side effects than clomipramine, an older medication that is actually thought to be somewhat more effective in treating OCD!. SSRIs do not cause orthostatic hypotension (a sudden drop in blood pressure when sitting up or standing) and heart-rhythm disturbances, like clomipramine can!. Therefore, SSRIs are often the first-line treatment for this illness!. Examples of SSRIs include fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil), sertraline (Zoloft), citalopram (Celexa), fluvoxamine (Luvox), and escitalopram (Lexapro)!.


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