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   Table of Contents
  • What is Tourette Syndrome?
  • Tourette Syndrome Symptoms
  • How are tics classified?
  • Can people with TS control their tics?
  • What causes Tourette Syndrome?
  • Tourette Syndrome - Associated Disorders
  • How is Tourette Syndrome diagnosed?
  • How is Tourette Syndrome treated?
  • Is Tourette Syndrome inherited?
  • Tourette Syndrome Prognosis
  • Tourette Syndrome - Educational Setting
  • Tourette Syndrome Research
  • Keeping on Top of Your Condition
  •      

    Tourette Syndrome Symptoms



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    The first symptoms of are usually facial tics--commonly eye blinking. However, facial tics can also include nose twitching or grimaces. With time, other motor tics may appear such as head jerking, neck stretching, foot stamping, or body twisting and bending.

    Tourette Syndrome patients may utter strange and unacceptable sounds, words, or phrases. It is not uncommon for a person with TS to continuously clear his or her throat, cough, sniff, grunt, yelp, bark, or shout.

    People with Tourette Syndrome may involuntarily shout obscenities (coprolalia) or constantly repeat the words of other people (echolalia). They may touch other people excessively or repeat actions obsessively and unnecessarily. A few patients with severe Tourette Syndrome demonstrate self-harming behaviors such as lip and cheek biting and head banging against hard objects. However, these behaviors are extremely rare.

    Tics alternately increase and decrease in severity, and periodically change in number, frequency, type, and location. Symptoms may subside for weeks or months at a time and later recur.




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