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Movement Disorders, 1992
AbstractA 59‐year‐old man with a 30‐year history of an unusual movement disorder characterised by involuntary axial spasms that occur only in recumbency is described. Clinical and electrophysiological evidence suggest that this disorder is best characterised as a simple tic of unusual form.
L, Davies+3 more
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AbstractA 59‐year‐old man with a 30‐year history of an unusual movement disorder characterised by involuntary axial spasms that occur only in recumbency is described. Clinical and electrophysiological evidence suggest that this disorder is best characterised as a simple tic of unusual form.
L, Davies+3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Psychological Reports, 2001
Comprehensive clinical evaluation of tics includes (1) assessments to diagnose (a) akathisia, myoclonus, stereotypies, and other dyskinesias and (b) their frequent behavioral concomitants, including attention deficits, compulsions, obsessions, and other psychopathologic manifestations, (2) descriptions of movement parameters from the patients, their ...
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Comprehensive clinical evaluation of tics includes (1) assessments to diagnose (a) akathisia, myoclonus, stereotypies, and other dyskinesias and (b) their frequent behavioral concomitants, including attention deficits, compulsions, obsessions, and other psychopathologic manifestations, (2) descriptions of movement parameters from the patients, their ...
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Tics and Tourette's: update on pathophysiology and tic control
Current Opinion in Neurology, 2016Purpose of review To describe recent advances in the pathophysiology of tics and Tourette syndrome, and novel insights on tic control. Recent findings The cortico-basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical loops are implicated in generation of tics.
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Phenomenology of tics and natural history of tic disorders
Brain and Development, 2003Tic symptoms, the hallmark of Tourette's syndrome (TS), may simply be fragments of innate behavior. As such, the sensory urges that precede tics may illuminate some of the normal internal cues that are intimately involved in the assembly of behavioral sequences.
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Gestes antagonistes in the suppression of tics: “Tricks for tics”
Movement Disorders, 1995Joanne Wojcieszek, A. E. Lang
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