Relationships between the menstrual cycle and neuropsychiatric and physical symptoms in females with Tourette syndrome
Daisy T. Noriega-Makarskyy, Evan Realbuto, Ariadne Kaylor, Lisa Osiecki, Angela Essa, Dongmei Yu, Cornelia Illmann, Carol A. Mathews, Jeremiah M. Scharf

TL;DR
This study explores how the menstrual cycle affects tics and other symptoms in women with Tourette syndrome, finding that some experience tic changes linked to their cycle.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the relationship between menstrual cycles and tic fluctuations in Tourette syndrome, which had not been systematically explored in decades.
Findings
26% of participants reported tic changes related to their menstrual cycle.
Higher tic severity and mood/anxiety changes predicted tic fluctuations during the cycle.
Abstract
The effects of the menstrual cycle on neuropsychiatric and physical symptoms have been examined in multiple psychiatric illnesses, but research on Tourette syndrome (TS) and menstruation is limited and inconclusive. One study published in 1992 reported that 34% of female respondents experienced tic fluctuations with their menstrual cycles; however, a subsequent 2001 study found no significant relationship between menstrual cycle-related hormonal changes and tic symptoms across participants. There has been no further published exploration of this topic in the intervening 20+ years, and thus these discrepant results have not been reconciled. The current study aimed to assess tic changes across the menstrual cycle and to explore clinical predictors of tic fluctuations in adult females with TS. An online survey was completed by 112 of 315 eligible female adults with TS. Respondents were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · Urticaria and Related Conditions
