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Showing posts with label tic explosions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tic explosions. Show all posts
Monday, February 9, 2015
Sometimes Tics Can Be Mistaken
Sometimes, it is easy to explain tics as being other things. Throat clearing, sniffing, blinking... All easy to mistake as being allergies. In fact, it's exactly what Monster Man started off with, which is why it took a while for us to realize that he had more going on than just simple allergies and a few 'quirks'. We were lucky when it came to Little Man because we knew what to look for, and his tics started off a little different.
Angel Baby, our oldest, has had severe allergies since she was a baby. Environmental allergies, allergies to some foods, allergies to meds, allergies to dyes... She has a rather extensive list. Her skin has always taken a hit, largely due to her allergies. Her skin would get itchy, she'd scratch, she'd get sores that would get infected... She has had a series of prescription ointments for her skin for the last several years. The battle to keep her skin healthy has been a long, stressful one. It wasn't until recently, when I caught her picking at spots on her arm, only for her to deny doing so, that I began to realize that it was more than just allergies. Sure enough, after keeping an eye on her (without her realizing it, of course), I discovered that she had a skin-picking tic.
The skin-picking isn't the only tic that was mistaken for something else. She often rubs her nose, clears her throat, and sniffs, again often figured to be related to her allergies. When it continued despite the absence of other allergy symptoms, it was easier to realize it wasn't allergy-related after all.
She's always had a dramatic side to her, so it wasn't a huge surprise when she started speaking with random accents. She has a British accent and an extremely country southern accent, on top of her usual voice. She'll often be talking in one voice, only to switch to the other mid-sentence. We'd teased about the voices, calling the British accent Penelope and the country accent Gretchen. When we realized that just saying the name while she was talking would trigger the accent to change without her even having time to think about making the switch, we realized that the accents, too, were a tic. In fact, there are times that she actually gets frustrated when she wants to speak normally but one of the accents comes out. It takes real effort on her part to NOT speak with one of the accents, rather than her having to try to speak with them.
We've known for a while now that we were dealing with TS with her, too, though she has not yet seen the neurologist for an official diagnosis. We were leaving it up to her, actually, since she is almost 16 and her tics are so mild that they hadn't caused her major frustration (with the exception of the skin-picking, which is finally starting to go away). She didn't want to get the diagnosis for herself, and we were trying not to think too much of it.
Unfortunately, Angel Baby's tics have gotten much more severe in the past week or two. She has developed a neck tic that has become quite uncomfortable for her. Watching her try to finish a meal, her neck jerking as many as 20 times a minute, has become very hard on us. She has had such a huge change that it has come to the point that we know she'll have to go to the neurologist for an official diagnosis soon, and that we'll have to find the right treatment for her since she is dealing with a lot of neck pain as a result of this tic.
No more mistaking the tics as something else in this house. It's time for us all to finally accept that all three of our kids are dealing with their own struggles with TS.
Friday, August 8, 2014
Explosive Tic Episodes
I mentioned recently that Tourette Syndrome isn't for wimps. I didn't know when I wrote that article that Monster Man's TS would only get worse from the punching tic he'd developed that was hurting him so badly. It's amazing how fast things can change.
Seventy-two hours ago, Monster Man was on his way home from his third day of his freshman year of high school. He'd suppressed his tics throughout the day at school. When he got home, he let loose his punching tic. It would come in spurts, lasting several minutes every hour or so. Nothing new. We'd seen this pattern in him several times in recent weeks.
Forty-eight hours ago, Monster Man was on his way home from his fourth school day. When he got home from school, I learned that he had been unable to suppress his punching tic the entire day, that he'd finally let a couple of punches loose as his class was leaving the room at one point during the day. A little concerning, but still not too out-of-the-ordinary for him. He'd had to let loose his other tics in the past from time to time.
After all the kids were home and we'd had dinner, Georgia Boy and I left the kids home alone to go return a Redbox movie, pick up a snack for Little Man for school the next day, and get Georgia Boy's hair cut. While his hair was being cut, I called home to ask Monster Man about a homework assignment (thank you, Remind 101 app for sending me a message while we were out). During our conversation, I noticed Monster Man was making an unusual sound, but didn't think a lot about it at first because he tends to make unusual sounds as a result of his Tourette Syndrome. It wasn't until he said the words "I can't stop ticcing" that I began to worry.
As soon as Georgia Boy's hair was finished, we rushed home. We found Monster Man doing his punching tic in combination with another tic - one that looked very much like a seizure. He would shake violently, stop to do his punching tic, and then start shaking again. It was both scary and heartbreaking to watch, and we were left feeling completely alone and helpless because we didn't know how to make things better for our son. We desperately wanted to help him stop, but nothing seemed to work. After two medications, time spent talking with his girlfriend (who also has TS) online, and almost three full hours, he finally calmed down enough to go to sleep.
Yesterday, I tried waking all the kids up for school. Angel Baby and Little Man both got around for school (rather grudgingly, I might add, due to the lack of sleep they'd received while their brother was having his explosive tic episode), but Monster Man struggled to wake up. Every time he opened his eyes, he'd start shaking violently again, then fall asleep immediately.
He ended up missing school. Instead, he had a visit to his neurologist for a change in his medications. He started improving a little throughout the day, but never really stopped (it's a rare occasion to be tic-free for any length of time). He took his new medicine combination at bedtime, and he slept really well last night. He woke up this morning ready to return to school.
Sadly, he didn't make it through the school day. I received a call just after 1:00 this afternoon that he was in the clinic with another bad tic episode. His teacher had tried walking him to the clinic and had to get help to get him into a wheelchair to be wheeled to the clinic after he fell to the ground in his explosive tic episode. I made the thirty minute trek to his high school to pick him up, where I found that his sister had been called from her class to help calm him down until I could arrive.
He's doing a little better now that he's home, but he still keeps going into the tic that looks so very much like a seizure. It's amazing how just seventy-two hours ago, we were praying for relief from his punching tic, and now we're at the point that we just want him to be able to have a good night's sleep so he can get a rest from the pain these tic explosions are causing him.
Seventy-two hours ago, Monster Man was on his way home from his third day of his freshman year of high school. He'd suppressed his tics throughout the day at school. When he got home, he let loose his punching tic. It would come in spurts, lasting several minutes every hour or so. Nothing new. We'd seen this pattern in him several times in recent weeks.
Forty-eight hours ago, Monster Man was on his way home from his fourth school day. When he got home from school, I learned that he had been unable to suppress his punching tic the entire day, that he'd finally let a couple of punches loose as his class was leaving the room at one point during the day. A little concerning, but still not too out-of-the-ordinary for him. He'd had to let loose his other tics in the past from time to time.
After all the kids were home and we'd had dinner, Georgia Boy and I left the kids home alone to go return a Redbox movie, pick up a snack for Little Man for school the next day, and get Georgia Boy's hair cut. While his hair was being cut, I called home to ask Monster Man about a homework assignment (thank you, Remind 101 app for sending me a message while we were out). During our conversation, I noticed Monster Man was making an unusual sound, but didn't think a lot about it at first because he tends to make unusual sounds as a result of his Tourette Syndrome. It wasn't until he said the words "I can't stop ticcing" that I began to worry.
As soon as Georgia Boy's hair was finished, we rushed home. We found Monster Man doing his punching tic in combination with another tic - one that looked very much like a seizure. He would shake violently, stop to do his punching tic, and then start shaking again. It was both scary and heartbreaking to watch, and we were left feeling completely alone and helpless because we didn't know how to make things better for our son. We desperately wanted to help him stop, but nothing seemed to work. After two medications, time spent talking with his girlfriend (who also has TS) online, and almost three full hours, he finally calmed down enough to go to sleep.
Yesterday, I tried waking all the kids up for school. Angel Baby and Little Man both got around for school (rather grudgingly, I might add, due to the lack of sleep they'd received while their brother was having his explosive tic episode), but Monster Man struggled to wake up. Every time he opened his eyes, he'd start shaking violently again, then fall asleep immediately.
He ended up missing school. Instead, he had a visit to his neurologist for a change in his medications. He started improving a little throughout the day, but never really stopped (it's a rare occasion to be tic-free for any length of time). He took his new medicine combination at bedtime, and he slept really well last night. He woke up this morning ready to return to school.
Sadly, he didn't make it through the school day. I received a call just after 1:00 this afternoon that he was in the clinic with another bad tic episode. His teacher had tried walking him to the clinic and had to get help to get him into a wheelchair to be wheeled to the clinic after he fell to the ground in his explosive tic episode. I made the thirty minute trek to his high school to pick him up, where I found that his sister had been called from her class to help calm him down until I could arrive.
He's doing a little better now that he's home, but he still keeps going into the tic that looks so very much like a seizure. It's amazing how just seventy-two hours ago, we were praying for relief from his punching tic, and now we're at the point that we just want him to be able to have a good night's sleep so he can get a rest from the pain these tic explosions are causing him.
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