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Uneven focal shoe deterioration in Tourette syndrome
Author(s) -
Andrea E. Cavanna,
Francesco Monaco,
Marco Mula,
Mary M. Robertson,
Hugo Critchley
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
neuropsychiatric disease and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.819
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1178-2021
pISSN - 1176-6328
DOI - 10.2147/nedt.2006.2.4.587
Subject(s) - tolerability , topiramate , medicine , bipolar disorder , lithium (medication) , mood , mood disorders , adjunctive treatment , mood stabilizer , tourette syndrome , epilepsy , valproic acid , psychiatry , pharmacology , adverse effect , anxiety
A 31-year-old single man (AB) sought neuropsychiatric consultation for treatment-resistant motor and vocal tics. He described himself expressing a total of 24 different tics, mainly facial twitches (eye blinking, raising eyebrows, mouth opening, lips licking, stereotyped grimacing) and inappropriate utterances (grunting, throat clearing, sniffing), since the age of 7. There appeared to be no family history of tic disorder. He reported occasional utterance of swear words in contextually inappropriate situations (coprolalia), and the urge to copy other people’s movements (echopraxia). Other tic-associated symptoms included self-injurious behaviours and forced touching of objects. A.B. met both DSM-IV-tr and ICD-10 criteria for Tourette syndrome, and also DSM-IV-tr criteria for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (combined type) in childhood.

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