[PDF][PDF] Tics and Tourette's disorder: a 2-to 7-year follow-up of 54 obsessive-compulsive children

HL Leonard, MC Lenane, SE Swedo, DC Rettew… - Am J Psychiatry, 1992 - Citeseer
HL Leonard, MC Lenane, SE Swedo, DC Rettew, ES Gershon, JL Rapoport
Am J Psychiatry, 1992Citeseer
Objective: This study examined a hypothesized etiologic relationship between Tourette's
disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Method: Fifty-four children who had initially
participated in treatment protocols for obsessive-compulsive disorder(Tourette's disorder
was an exclusionary criterion) were reevaluated 2-7 years later with a neurological
examination and a structured interview to establish the presence or absence oftics and
Tourette's disorder. The children's first-degree relatives(N= 1 71) were also screened for tic …
Objective
This study examined a hypothesized etiologic relationship between Tourette’s disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Method
Fifty-four children who had initially participated in treatment protocols for obsessive-compulsive disorder(Tourette’s disorder was an exclusionary criterion) were reevaluated 2-7 years later with a neurological examination and a structured interview to establish the presence or absence oftics and Tourette’s disorder. The children’s first-degree relatives(N= 1 71) were also screened for tic disorders.
Results
At baseline, 57%(N= 31) ofthe patients had lifetime histories oftics. At follow-up, 59%(N= 32) had lifetime histories of tics; eight of these(all males) met the criteria for Tourette’s disorder (six had developed the disorder, and two, it could be argued in retrospect, might have met the criteria at baseline). The patients with lifetime histories of tics had greater anxiety, a higher ratio of CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid to homovanillic acid, and a younger age at onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder than those without tics. The patients with Tourette’s disorder differed from other male patients only in having an earlier age at onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder. Ofthe first-degree relatives, 1. 8%(N= 3) had Tourette’s disorder, and 1 4%(N= 24) had a tic disorder.
Conclusions
Except for their earlier age at onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder, the patients with Tourette’s disorder were indistinguishable from those without. The apparent high rate oftics and Tourette’s disorder in the subjects and their relatives is consistent with the hypothesis that in some cases, obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette’s disorder may be alternative manifestations of the same underlying illness.
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