Children with tic disorder

Tic disorder, also known as tics-Tourette Syndrome, is a syndrome or behavioral disorder characterized mainly by movement, speech, and convulsions. It is mainly manifested by involuntary twitching of the muscles of the eyes, face, limbs, and trunk, or accompanied by abnormal pronunciation of the throat and dirty language. It is a more common psychological and behavioral disease in children. The child's performance characteristics are: involuntary frequent eyebrow blinking, wrinkling nose, twisting his neck and shaking his head, shrugging his shoulders, making unusual sounds like throat clearing or dry coughing in the throat, a few children suffer from swearing and cursing. Most children are accompanied by ADHD. They often suffer from memory loss, poor computing ability, unresponsiveness, irritability, learning difficulties, decreased grades and severe suspension of school. The onset of tic disorder is mostly in the adolescents before the age of 21, and it is more common between the ages of 2 to 12 years, and more than men. The disease is long, recurrent and gradually worsens. If it is not treated in time, the milder affects the Studying and living can be developed into anti-social personality.

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