How Common Is Tourette's Syndrome?
Neurological Disorder Affects Three Out of
Every 1,000 Children, Boys More Often Than Girls
By Bill Hendrick
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
June 4, 2009 -- Tourette's syndrome afflicts three out of every 1,000
children between ages 6 and 17 in the United States, the CDC says in its
first-ever estimate of the prevalence of the neurological disorder.
The findings are revealed in the June 5 edition of the
CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
According to the MMWR study, Tourette's syndrome is three times more common
in boys than in girls, and about twice as common in children 12 to 17 as in
those 6 to 11.
Twenty-seven percent of children with Tourette's syndrome have moderate or
severe cases, the study says, and 79% of youngsters who have it also have been
diagnosed with at least one additional mental health or neurodevelopmental
condition.
Tourette's syndrome typically starts in childhood and is
characterized by recurring multiple motor tics, and at least one vocal tic. Symptoms are
generally most severe between 10 and 12 years of age and lessen by adulthood.
These are involuntary, repetitive, stereotyped, usually sudden and rapid
movements or vocalizations that may be suppressed for short periods of time, the
CDC report says.
"TS [Tourette's syndrome] and tic disorders have been
linked to higher rates of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder,
obsessive-compulsive disorder, and
impairments associated with these conditions, such as
learning disabilities and
problems with peer relations," says Rebecca Bitsko, MD, health scientist at the
CDC, in a news release.
She says because so many children with Tourette's also have other
neurological or mental health problems, the relationship between the conditions
warrant further study.
Non-Hispanic white children were more than twice as likely as non-Hispanic
black children or Hispanic children to have a parent-reported case of Tourette's
syndrome.
"Having an estimate of the number of U.S. children who are diagnosed with TS
is a first step toward understanding the overall impact of this condition in the
population," Bitsko says. "Further research must examine differences in access
to health care for children with TS in different population groups, the impact
of TS on the quality of life, long-term outcomes for children with TS, and
strategies for reducing the impact of conditions associated with TS."
Researchers examined National Survey of Children's Health data from parents
or guardians for 64,034 children 6-17 years old between April 2007 and July
2008.
The NSCH was the first large, national, population-based survey of U.S.
children less than 18 years old that included questions about Tourette's
syndrome.
SOURCES:
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report; vol 58: pp 581-585.
News release, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
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