Articles: Case Study
Tourette's Syndrome: What Are the Influences of Gender and Comorbid Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?

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ABSTRACT

Objective

To explore the influence of gender and comorbid obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) on the phenomenology of Tourette's syndrome (TS).

Method

TS proband groups defined by gender and comorbid OCD status were compared on a variety of sociodemographic variables, clinical characteristics, and perinatal complications.

Results

Compared to females, males more often onset with rage and had ever experienced any form of simple tics. Females onset with compulsive tics more often than males. Probands with comorbid OCD were more likely than those without OCD to onset with complex tics. Delivery complications, especially forceps deliveries, were associated with being male and with having OCD. Fetal exposure to relatively high levels of coffee, cigarettes, or alcohol predicted OCD in TS probands. Diagnosis of TS occurred at later ages among females than among males. Males and females displayed different age distributions.

Conclusions

Males and females tend to experience different kinds of symptoms at onset. However, the overall experience of TS appears to be similar for both groups. Perinatal brain injury is implicated in the etiology of TS in some boys. Early brain injury may cause or exacerbate the development of OCD in some TS sufferers.

Key Words

Tourette's syndrome
obsessive-compulsive disorder
gender
perinatal complications

Cited by (0)

This work was supported in part by the National Institute of Mental Health, National Research Service Award MH 17119-10 (a training fellowship to Dr. Santangelo), MH00508 (a Research Scientist Development Award to Dr. Pauls), MH49351, K21MH90007 (a Scientist Development Award to Dr. Goldstein), and by National Institutes of Health Award NS16648.