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dc.creatorMiranda C,Marcelo
dc.creatorMenéndez G,Pedro
dc.creatorDavid G,Perla
dc.creatorTroncoso Sch,Mónica
dc.creatorHernández Ch,Marta
dc.creatorChaná C,Pedro
dc.date1999-12-01
dc.date.accessioned2020-02-17T15:25:14Z
dc.date.available2020-02-17T15:25:14Z
dc.identifierhttps://scielo.conicyt.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98871999001200010
dc.identifier.urihttps://revistaschilenas.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125994
dc.descriptionBackground: Tourette s syndrome is a childhood-onset hereditary neurobehavioural disorder believed to occur without geographical restrictions. Although there have been reports of this disorder worldwide just a few are from Latin America. Aim: To report a preliminary experience with a series of 70 patients and to review recent advances in this disorder. Patients and Method: We reviewed patients seen in pediatric and adult neurological clinics in Santiago, Chile, all of whom fulfilled clinical diagnostic criteria for Tourette Syndrome. Results: Seventy patients were studied, 54 males (77.1%) and 16 females (22.8%), their mean age at first evaluation was 13.6 years (range 2-46). The mean age of onset of symptoms was 6.4 (range 2-20), the mean time of follow-up was 3 years. Fifty-eight patients showed simple motor tics (blinking, facial grimacing, shoulder shrugging), whereas dystonic tics like head jerking were seen in 38 patients, torticollis in 6 and oculogyric movements in 2. Complex motor tics like jumping, antics, trunk bending and head shaking were present in 16 subjects. Vocal tics were predominantly of the simple type: sniffing, throat clearing, blowing, and whistling. Complex vocal tics were seen in 12 patients, five cases showed palilalia, 3 echolalia and only six displayed coprolalia (8.5%). Tics were of mild to moderate severity in most patients. Obsessive-compulsive disorder was observed in 22.8% and attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder were present in 35.7%. Forty-five patients (64.2%) had a first degree relative with tics, nine patients (12.8%) had a family history of obsessive-compulsive disorder. The current evidence involving desinhibition of cortico-striatum-thalamic-cortical neuronal circuits in the pathogenesis of this disorder is analyzed. Conclusion: Our report supports the recognized clinical homogeneity and genetical basis of Tourette s syndrome regardless of geographical region and ethnic origin.
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dc.languagees
dc.publisherSociedad Médica de Santiago
dc.relation10.4067/S0034-98871999001200010
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.sourceRevista médica de Chile v.127 n.12 1999
dc.subjectTourette Syndrome
dc.subjectTics, Obsessive-compulsive disorder
dc.subjectBasal ganglia
dc.titleEnfermedad de los tics (síndrome de Gilles de la Tourette): características clínicas de 70 pacientes


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