Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, 63110, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD, 21287, USA.
F1000Res. 2023 Apr 17;11:1566. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.129252.2. eCollection 2022.
Recent years have seen a dramatic increase in new "tic" cases in teens and young adults. These individuals often present with fulminant onset of symptoms not commonly seen in Tourette syndrome (TS) and are often diagnosed with Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder (FND-tic). However, some authors have questioned whether this illness truly differs from typical Provisional Tic Disorder (PTD) and TS. Previous studies have compared FND-tic, usually a few months after symptom onset, to patients with TS, usually years after symptom onset. We sought to test whether the presenting symptoms of FND-tic differ substantially from those in patients at a similar duration of symptoms who are later diagnosed with TS. This comparative study examines clinical features summarized from published reports of FND-tic with novel data from a longitudinal study of PTD. This study came from a referral center for TS and tic disorders and included 89 children with tics whose first tic occurred a median of 3.6 months earlier, nearly all of whom were diagnosed with a chronic tic disorder at follow-up. Specifically, we examine clinical features identified in a recent literature review as supporting a diagnosis of FND-tic, including symptom characteristics, course, severity and comorbidity. Several clinical features dramatically distinguish the patients diagnosed with FND-tic from those diagnosed with typical PTD. For example, coprophenomena are reported at or shortly after symptom onset in over half of FND-tic patients, whereas even several months after onset, coprophenomena had occurred in only 1 of 89 children with PTD. Six clinical features each have a positive predictive value over 90% for FND-tic diagnosis if prior probability is 50%. These new data provide strong evidence supporting the diagnostic validity of FND-tic as distinct from TS.
近年来,青少年和年轻成年人中新出现的“抽动”病例急剧增加。这些患者通常表现为症状的暴发性发作,这些症状在妥瑞氏综合征(TS)中并不常见,通常被诊断为功能性神经症状障碍(FND-tic)。然而,一些作者质疑这种疾病是否真的与典型的暂发性抽动障碍(PTD)和 TS 不同。以前的研究比较了 FND-tic,通常在症状出现后几个月,与 TS 患者,通常在症状出现后几年。我们试图测试 FND-tic 的首发症状是否与那些症状持续时间相似但后来被诊断为 TS 的患者有很大的不同。这项对比研究检查了从 FND-tic 的已发表报告中总结的临床特征,并结合了一项 PTD 纵向研究的新数据。这项研究来自 TS 和抽动障碍的转诊中心,包括 89 名首发抽动的儿童,他们的首次抽动中位数发生在 3.6 个月前,几乎所有患者在随访时都被诊断为慢性抽动障碍。具体来说,我们检查了最近文献综述中支持 FND-tic 诊断的临床特征,包括症状特征、病程、严重程度和共病。一些临床特征明显将 FND-tic 患者与典型 PTD 患者区分开来。例如,在超过一半的 FND-tic 患者中,首发症状时或首发症状后不久即出现了共病现象,而在 89 名患有 PTD 的儿童中,即使在首发症状后几个月,也仅出现了 1 例共病现象。如果先验概率为 50%,则六个临床特征的阳性预测值均超过 90%,有利于 FND-tic 的诊断。这些新数据为 FND-tic 的诊断有效性提供了有力证据,表明其与 TS 不同。