Tourette Syndrome Flashcards
Classes of medications for treating Tourette’s
- Dopamine antagonists (atypical antipsychotics)
- Dopamine depleters
- Centrally acting alpha agonists
Most commonly used medications for Tourette’s in the USA in actual practice
- Resperidone (atypical antipsychotic)
- Clonidine (central alpha agonist)
- Aripiprazole (atypical antipsychotic)
Diagnostic criteria for Tourette’s
- Multiple motor and one or more vocal tics during the illness course (but not necessarily at the same time)
- Frequency of tics many times a day, nearly every day, for more than 1 year
- No period of remission lasting more than 2 months
- Onset before 18 years of age
- Not due to substance or other medical condition
Athetoid movements
Slow, irregular, writhing movements
(athetosis)
PANDAS
- Pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infection
- Characteried by winter-spring seasonal worsening of tics
- OCD, Tourette, and tics are more common in chilren who have had sreptococcal infection in the last 3 months or multiple in the last 12 months
- Must be at least considered before starting treatment for Tourette’s
Duration of transient tic disorders
Last at least 4 weeks, but not longer than 1 year
Chronic motor or vocal tic disorders
May last longer than 1 year
But, there is an absence of multiple motor tics and/or motor and vocal tics occurring simultaneously
Habit reversal training
Form of psychotherapy with good empirical evidence for treating tic disorders
Involves training the child to become aware of the averseive sensation, called a premonitory urge, that is relieved by tics. Then, to build a conscious response to this urge without engaging in tic behavior.
Best pharmacotherapy choice for a patient with ADHD and tics
Centrally acting alpha agonists
Clonidine or guanfacine
Most effective, evidence based atypical antipsychotic for treating tic disorders
AND, its side effects
Risperidone
Side effects: Weight gain, lipid abnormalities, sedation. In addition to the classic dopamine antagonist stuff.
If all else fails, what neuroleptics are used for Tourette’s?
Haloperidol or pimozide
Note that if pimozide is used, there is risk of QTc prolongation, and patients must have regular ECG checks
What are the options if a patient with ADHD develops tics on a stimulant?
- Switch to atomoxetine therapy
- Add a centrally acting alpha-2 agonist
When patients present with anxiety-provoked tics, it is often best to. . .
. . . treat the anxiety and see if the tics respond
So, rather than starting a dopamine antagonist or adrenergic agonist, you might start an SSRI
Vocal tic examples
- Words
- Throat clearing
- Grunting
- Squeaking