1. Psychiatric comorbidity is common in dystonia and other movement disorders.
- Author
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Lorentzos, Michelle S., Heyman, Isobel, Baig, Benjamin J., Coughtrey, Anna E., McWilliams, Andrew, Dossetor, David R., Waugh, Mary-Clare, Evans, Ruth A., Hollywood, Josie, Burns, Joshua, Menezes, Manoj P., Mohammad, Shekeeb S., Grattan-Smith, Padraig, Gorman, Kathleen M., Crowe, Belinda H. A., Goodman, Robert, Kurian, Manju A., and Dale, Russell C.
- Subjects
MOVEMENT disorders ,SEPARATION anxiety ,COMORBIDITY ,TIC disorders ,CEREBRAL anoxia-ischemia ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL illness ,MEDICAL care ,MENTAL depression ,DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,RESEARCH ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,RESEARCH methodology ,DYSTONIA ,CASE-control method ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective: To determine rates of psychiatric comorbidity in a clinical sample of childhood movement disorders (MDs).Design: Cohort study.Setting: Tertiary children's hospital MD clinics in Sydney, Australia and London, UK.Patients: Cases were children with tic MDs (n=158) and non-tic MDs (n=102), including 66 children with dystonia. Comparison was made with emergency department controls (n=100), neurology controls with peripheral neuropathy or epilepsy (n=37), and community controls (n=10โ438).Interventions: On-line development and well-being assessment which was additionally clinically rated by experienced child psychiatrists.Main Outcome Measures: Diagnostic schedule and manual of mental disorders-5 criteria for psychiatric diagnoses.Results: Psychiatric comorbidity in the non-tic MD cohort (39.2%) was comparable to the tic cohort (41.8%) (not significant). Psychiatric comorbidity in the non-tic MD cohort was greater than the emergency control group (18%, p<0.0001) and the community cohort (9.5%, p<0.00001), but not the neurology controls (29.7%, p=0.31). Almost half of the patients within the tic cohort with psychiatric comorbidity were receiving medical psychiatric treatment (45.5%) or psychology interventions (43.9%), compared with only 22.5% and 15.0%, respectively, of the non-tic MD cohort with psychiatric comorbidity.Conclusions: Psychiatric comorbidity is common in non-tic MDs such as dystonia. These psychiatric comorbidities appear to be under-recognised and undertreated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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