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Tic disorders and Tourette syndrome

Common, fluctuating movements and sounds that are involuntary — usually best helped by understanding, behavioural therapy and, when needed, medication.

Tics are sudden, repetitive movements (motor tics) or sounds (vocal tics) that a child feels compelled to make. They are common in childhood, typically start between ages 4 and 8, and naturally wax and wane. Tourette syndrome is diagnosed when multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic have been present for over a year, with onset before age 18. Tics are not 'bad behaviour' and are largely involuntary; many children improve markedly by adulthood. Attention, anxiety and obsessive–compulsive features often accompany tics and sometimes affect a child more than the tics themselves.

At a glance

What it is
Involuntary motor and/or vocal tics
Tourette syndrome
Multiple motor + ≥1 vocal tic, >1 year, onset <18
Typical onset
Ages 4–8, with a waxing–waning course
Often with
ADHD, anxiety and obsessive–compulsive features
Outlook
Tics often improve substantially by adulthood

What tics and Tourette syndrome are

Tics are brief, repetitive, stereotyped movements (such as blinking, head jerks, shrugging) or sounds (such as throat-clearing, sniffing, grunting). They are usually preceded by an uncomfortable urge and can be suppressed briefly, but doing so builds tension — which is why they are described as involuntary rather than deliberate.

When multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic have been present for more than a year, with onset before age 18, the diagnosis is Tourette syndrome. The diagnosis is clinical — there is no specific test — and the tics characteristically come and go in waves over weeks and months.

Co-occurring difficulties

For many children, attention difficulties (ADHD), anxiety, and obsessive–compulsive features have a bigger day-to-day impact than the tics themselves. Recognising and supporting these is often the most helpful part of care.

Treatment

Many children need only reassurance and education — for the family and school — that tics are involuntary and not a sign of misbehaviour. When tics are troublesome, the first-line treatment with the best evidence is behavioural: Comprehensive Behavioural Intervention for Tics (CBIT), which includes habit-reversal training.

When medication is needed, options include alpha-2 agonists (clonidine, guanfacine — often helpful when ADHD coexists) and, for more severe tics, dopamine-modulating medicines (such as aripiprazole, risperidone or tiapride) or VMAT2 inhibitors. Botulinum toxin can help a single bothersome tic, and deep brain stimulation is reserved for rare, severe, treatment-resistant cases in adults.

How an educational review can help

An educational review can explain what is and isn't a tic, put the diagnosis and any co-occurring ADHD/OCD/anxiety in context, and clarify which treatments (behavioural versus medication) fit your child's situation — helping you prepare questions for your treating team. It is educational and does not replace your clinician's care.

Selected sources

  • European clinical guidelines for Tourette syndrome and other tic disorders (ESSTS).
  • American Academy of Neurology practice guideline on the treatment of tics in Tourette syndrome and chronic tic disorders.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-22

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