Tourette syndrome, also (and perhaps more properly) known as Gilles de la Tourette syndrome, is a common neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by tics.
On this page:
Epidemiology
Tourette syndrome, by definition, commences in childhood, with a mean onset of approximately 6 years 1. It is more common in males 1,2.
Associations
Clinical presentation
The hallmark feature of Tourette syndrome are tics, which are sudden, rapid, recurrent movements or volcalisations 1,2. The tics in Tourette syndrome typically wax and wane in frequency, anatomical location (typically starting in the face/head region), number, complexity, and severity over time 1,2. Additionally, they are typically preceded by an unpleasant 'premonitory urge', during which they can be briefly suppressed 1,2.
There are generally two types of tics described in Tourette syndrome 1,2:
-
motor tics
-
simple (involving a single group of muscles): e.g. eye blinking, nose twitching, head jerking, etc.
non-clonic tics, such as dystonic or tonic tics, are less common
complex (involving multiple groups of muscles and resembling normal motor acts): e.g. punching, kicking, jumping, copropraxia, echopraxia, palipraxia, etc.
-
-
vocal (phonic) tics
simple: e.g. throat clearing, sniffing, grunting, barking, moaning, etc.
complex: e.g. words or sentences, coprolalia, echolalia, palilalia, etc.
Radiographic features
Conventional neuroimaging with CT and MRI is normal 1.
Treatment and prognosis
Treatment is multimodal and may not be employed in every case of Tourette syndrome, but sometimes only in cases whereby the tics interfere significantly with daily life 1-3. Management options broadly include 1-3:
psychotherapy
pharmacotherapy: e.g. antipsychotics (aripiprazole, haloperidol, etc.), VMAT2 inhibitors (tetrabenazine, etc.), topiramate, clonidine, botulinum toxin A injections
-
surgery: deep brain stimulation
reserved for refractory cases
History and etymology
The syndrome is named after Georges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette (1857-1905), a French neurologist, who described the condition in 1885 5.