Symptom Network Analysis in a Large Sample of Children and Adults with a Chronic Tic Disorder

Author:

Forlim Caroline Garcia12ORCID,Brandt Valerie34ORCID,Jakubovski Ewgeni4,Ganos Christos5,Kühn Simone12,Müller‐Vahl Kirsten4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Neuronal Plasticity Working Group, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

2. Center for Environmental Neuroscience Max Planck Institute for Human Development Berlin Germany

3. School of Psychology, Centre for Innovation in Mental Health University of Southampton Southampton UK

4. Clinic of Psychiatry, Social Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Hannover Medical School Hannover Germany

5. Movement Disorder Clinic, Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease, Division of Neurology University of Toronto, Toronto Western Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChronic tic disorders (CTD) are multifaceted disorders characterized by multiple motor and/or vocal tics. They are often associated with complex tics including echophenomena, paliphenomena, and coprophenomena as well as psychiatric comorbidities such as attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and obsessive‐compulsive disorder (OCD).ObjectivesOur goal was to uncover the inter‐relational structure of CTD and comorbid symptoms in children and adults and to understand changes in symptom structure across development.MethodsWe used network and graph analyses to uncover the structure of association of symptoms in childhood/adolescence (n = 529) and adulthood (n = 503) and how this structure might change from childhood to adulthood, pinpointing core symptoms as a main target for interventions.ResultsThe analysis yielded core symptom networks in young and adult patients with CTD including complex tics and tic‐related phenomena as well as touching people and objects. Core symptoms in childhood also included ADHD symptoms, whereas core symptoms in adults included symptoms of OCD instead. Interestingly, self‐injurious behavior did not play a core role in the young CTD network, but became one of the central symptoms in adults with CDT. In addition, we found strong connections between complex motor and vocal tics as well as echolalia and echopraxia.ConclusionsNext to other complex tics, echophenomena, paliphenomena, and coprophenomena can be regarded core symptoms of CTD. ADHD symptoms are closely related to CTD in childhood, whereas symptoms of OCD and self‐injurious behavior are closely associated with CTD in adults. Our results suggest that a differentiation between motor and vocal tics is somewhat arbitrary.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference46 articles.

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4. SzejkoN Lampe‐GoesslingH PisarenkoA HaasM JakubovskiE Müller‐VahlKR.Self‐Injurious Behavior in Patients with Chronic Tic Disorders – Development and Validation of the Self‐injurious Behaviour Scale (SIBS). ESSTS2021.

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