Zea Vera Alonso, Bruce Adrienne, Garris Jordan, Tochen Laura, Bhatia Poonam, Lehman Rebecca K, Lopez Wendi, Wu Steve W, Gilbert Donald L
Division of Neurology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Neurology, Children's National Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia.
Department of Pediatrics, Prisma Health, Greenville, South Carolina; University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville, Greenville, South Carolina.
Pediatr Neurol. 2022 May;130:14-20. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2022.02.003. Epub 2022 Feb 26.
Pediatricians and pediatric subspecialists worldwide have reported a marked increase in functional (conversion) disorders with tic-like behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic. These patients often report frequent viewing of Tourette syndrome (TS) TikTok videos, suggesting disease modeling. We aimed to evaluate tic phenomenology in videos posted on TikTok.
The 100 most-viewed videos under #tourettes in TikTok were randomly assigned to two of three primary reviewers (<2 years independent practice), all pediatric neurologists specializing in movement disorders, for extraction and classification of tic phenomenology. Initial disagreements were solved by consensus. If not resolved, one of five senior reviewers (>2 years independent pediatric movement disorder practice) served as a tiebreaker. In addition, two primary and one senior reviewer rated each video on a Likert scale from 1 = "All the tics are typical of TS" to 5 = "None of the tics are typical of TS". Median scores and Spearman correlation between primary and senior reviewers were calculated.
Six videos without tic-like behaviors were excluded. Most videos depicted coprophenomena (coprolalia: 53.2%; copropraxia: 20.2%), often with unusual characteristics. Frequently, videos demonstrated atypical phenomenology such as very strong influence by the environment (motor: 54.3%; phonic: 54.3%), aggression (19.1%), throwing objects (22.3%), self-injurious behaviors (27.7%), and long phrases (>3 words; 45.7%). Most videos portrayed atypical, nontic behaviors (median [IQR] Likert ratings: 5 [4-5]). Primary vs. senior rater scores demonstrated moderate agreement (r = 0.46; P < 0.001).
TS symptom portrayals on highly viewed TikTok videos are predominantly not representative or typical of TS.
全球的儿科医生和儿科专科医生报告称,在新冠疫情期间,出现抽动样行为的功能性(转换)障碍显著增加。这些患者经常报告频繁观看有关妥瑞氏症(TS)的TikTok视频,提示存在疾病模仿。我们旨在评估TikTok上发布的视频中的抽动现象。
TikTok上#tourettes标签下观看次数最多的100个视频被随机分配给三位主要审阅者(独立执业年限<2年)中的两位,他们均为专门研究运动障碍的儿科神经科医生,负责提取和分类抽动现象。最初的分歧通过共识解决。若未解决,则由五位资深审阅者(独立从事儿科运动障碍执业年限>2年)中的一位进行裁决。此外,两位主要审阅者和一位资深审阅者对每个视频按照李克特量表进行评分,从1 = “所有抽动都是TS的典型表现”到5 = “没有抽动是TS的典型表现”。计算主要审阅者和资深审阅者之间的中位数得分及斯皮尔曼相关性。
排除了6个无抽动样行为的视频。大多数视频描绘了共病现象(秽语症:53.2%;秽亵行为:20.2%),且通常具有不寻常的特征。视频中经常展示非典型现象,如受环境影响极大(运动性:54.3%;发声性:54.3%)、攻击性(19.1%)、扔东西(22.3%)、自我伤害行为(27.7%)以及长词组(>3个单词;45.7%)。大多数视频描绘的是非典型的、非抽动行为(中位数[四分位间距]李克特评分:5[4 - 5])。主要审阅者与资深审阅者的评分显示出中等程度的一致性(r = 0.46;P < 0.001)。
TikTok上高浏览量视频中对TS症状的描绘主要不具有TS的代表性或典型性。