Abstract

The child with recent onset of tics is a common patient in a pediatrics or child neurology practice. If the child's first tic was less than a year in the past, the diagnosis is usually Provisional Tic Disorder (PTD). Published reviews by experts reveal substantial consensus on prognosis in this situation: the tics will almost always disappear in a few months, having remained mild while they lasted. Surprisingly, however, the sparse existing data may not support these opinions. PTD may have just as much importance for science as for clinical care. It provides an opportunity to prospectively observe the spontaneous remission of tics. Such prospective studies may aid identification of genes or biomarkers specifically associated with remission rather than onset of tics. A better understanding of tic remission may also suggest novel treatment strategies for Tourette syndrome, or may lead to secondary prevention of tic disorders. This review summarizes the limited existing data on the epidemiology, phenomenology, and outcome of PTD, highlights areas in which prospective study is sorely needed, and proposes that tic disorders may completely remit much less often than is generally believed.

Highlights

  • Most parents want predictions of the future for their child

  • Many experts conclude that Provisional Tic Disorder (PTD)—tics in someone whose first tic was less than a year ago—is probably a different disease than chronic tic disorders including Gilles de la Tourette syndrome[1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • Environmental factors In the monozygotic twin study of TS cited in the previous paragraph, the lower birth-weight twin had more severe tics in 12 of 13 pairs, and “the magnitude of the intrapair birth-weight difference ... strongly predicted the magnitude of the intrapair tic score difference”[62]. These results suggest that environmental factors in utero may predict severity and outcome of tic disorders

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Summary

Introduction

Most parents want predictions of the future for their child. This, is one of the more challenging aspects of caring for the child with [tics]1. Many of the 73 children with prospective follow-up data probably had PTD at the baseline visit, but many already had chronic tics With this caveat, one interesting point is that outcome depended on age of onset; remission was more likely (16 of 26, 62%) in children whose tics had started at age 6–8 years than in children whose tics began at age 2–5 (7 of 29, 24%) or at age 9–15 (6 of 17, 35%; p

Discussion
Kuperman S
Golden GS: Movement disorders in children
12. American Psychiatric Association
19. Boenheim C
26. Robertson MM
27. Robertson MM
71. Costello EJ
81. Bruun RD
87. Zausmer DM
93. Singer HS
Findings
97. Wagner-Jauregg J
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