OCD and Basal Ganglia | Dr. Sydney Ceruto — MindLAB
Basal Ganglia Gating Failure — Why Your Brain Can’t Filter Intrusive Thoughts Key Takeaways The basal ganglia function as the brain’s automatic transmission — a gating system that decides which thoughts reach conscious awareness and which get filtered out. In OCD, the direct (excitatory) pathway over-fires and drowns out the indirect (inhibitory) pathway, lowering the threshold for intrusive thoughts to repeatedly pass the gate. Neuroimaging meta-analyses consistently identify structural and functional differences in the caudate nucleus and cortico-basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical (CBGTC) loops in OCD. OCD is best understood at the circuit level, not as a failure of willpower, reasoning, or thought control — the cognitive experience is downstream of the gating failure. Neural recalibration of the direct/indirect pathway balance is neuroplastic — the circuit is responsive to targeted intervention across weeks to months. In MindLAB Neuroscience’s practice I see individuals arrive having decided their brain is broken. It is not. The basal ganglia act as an automatic transmission — the gating system that determines which thoughts deserve attention and which get dropped. In OCD, that transmission sticks. Intrusive thoughts that should clear the gate keep passing through, amplified and rehearsed. OCD and basal ganglia dysfunction are inseparable, and the circuit has now been mapped precisely. The problem is not weakness of thought control. The problem is a specific pathway imbalance, and it is recalibratable. ...
