Challenge Case Report: Tic Disorder in an Adult
Clinical Presentation
JB is age 35, right-handed, with a history of generalized anxiety disorder, and presenting to clinic for evaluation and management of unusual movements that began in adolescence. JB also makes brief vocalizations including throat clearing and grunting. The movements and vocalizations have become more frequent and disabling, evolving from rare, mild, and manageable to preventing use of a computer or holding an effective business meeting. There is an anticipatory sensation and urge to perform the movements beforehand followed by relief after completing the movements. JB can suppress these tics temporarily, but after several seconds there is a building urge to perform them.
Medical and Family History
These unusual movements began occurring when JB was age 6 as sudden, brief, jerking movements of the neck and brief shoulder shrugs. In adolescence, JB was diagnosed with a tic disorder by a neurologist and told that the tics would resolve on their own with time; no therapeutics were tried.
JB’s generalized anxiety began in adolescence and is currently poorly controlled owing to life stressors. JB takes 0.5 mg clonazepam tablets, as needed, up to 3 times daily for anxiety; rarely drinks alcohol; and reports being a nonsmoker who uses no other drugs.
Family history is notable for obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)-like behaviors in JB’s father and anxiety in JB’s brother.
Diagnostic Evaluations
JB’s neurologic exam is remarkable for frequent brief shoulder shrugs, jerky head turns to the right, and throat clearing. Findings of the cranial nerve, motor, sensory, cerebellar, and reflex examinations are unremarkable.
Complete blood chemistry (CBC), comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and vitamin B12 levels were all within normal limits. A brain CT was unremarkable. Neuropsychologic testing showed relatively mild impairments in perceptual reasoning with mild inattentiveness and mild retrieval-based difficulty in verbal memory.
Challenge Questions
1. Which of the following features from JB’s history is NOT unique to tic phenomenology?
A. Premonitory urge preceding the movement
B. Temporary suppressibility of the movement
C. Quick, jerky movement
D. Transitory relief after performing the movement
Click here for the answer
C, Quick, jerky movements are NOT unique to tic phenomenology and may be seen in functional neurologic disorders, neuromuscular disorders, seizures, and other neurologic conditions. In contrast to those disorders, however, tics are characterized by premonitory urges, temporary suppressibility, and transitory relief after movements occur.1
2. Which of the following is NOT required for the diagnosis of classic Tourette syndrome?
A. Onset of tics before age 18
B. Male sex
C. Presence of both motor and phonic tics
D. Persistence of tics beyond the period of 1 year
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B, Male sex/gender is NOT required for the diagnosis of classic Tourette syndrome (TS). Although TS is reported to be 3 to 4 times more common in boys than girls, it has also been reported that this is attenuated in adulthood.2 Diagnostic criteria for TS require the presence of at least 1 motor and 1 phonic tic for at least 1 year with onset before age 18 years.3
3.Which of the following medications is NOT a recommended pharmacologic treatment for tics?
A. Clonidine
B. Topiramate
C. Levetiracetam
D. Olanzapine
Click here for the answer
C, Levetiracetam is an antiseizure medication (ASM) that is NOT a recommended pharmacologic treatment for tic disorders. The ASM, topiramate, has shown efficacy in 1 randomized controlled clinical trial.4 Clonidine and guanfacine are alpha-2-agonists that have been shown superior to placebo for tic reduction in multiple clinical trials and are first-line treatment for tics.5-7
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