What Are Facial Tics?

Facial tics is a very common disease, and her symptoms include short vows, rapid, sudden, and involuntary movements of varying degrees, beginning with frequent blinking, frowning, etc.

Facial tics

Facial tics is a very common disease, and her symptoms include short vows, rapid, sudden, and involuntary movements of varying degrees, beginning with frequent blinking, frowning, etc.
The main factors that can cause tics in children are: 1. Motherhood factors: 2. Infectious factors: 3. Mental factors: 4. Family factors: 5. Others: such as epilepsy.
Chinese name
Facial tics
Facial
1. Inattentive children with facial tic disorder can easily lead to decline in academic performance, some fail, and even repeat. Bring great pain to children and parents. and also
1. Patients have a certain ability to suppress the symptoms. When mild patients intentionally cover their tics, it is difficult for parents and doctors to detect them.
2. Some doctors think that facial tics must have profanity, but in fact only one-third of patients have profanity after a few years of onset.
3. Many non-professional doctors are unfamiliar with this disease and are confused by a variety of symptoms. Dry cough caused by laryngeal muscle twitch was misdiagnosed as chronic pharyngitis and bronchitis; blinking and frowning were misdiagnosed as ocular conjunctivitis; nasal movement was misdiagnosed as chronic rhinitis. To choose the earliest and most professional hospital for the treatment of facial tics, the hospital has entered the world's most effective and best diagnostic equipment.
4. Parents do not agree with this disease. People who rarely see a doctor because they keep blinking and shrug their shoulders often consider it a bad habit. When they went to the hospital to see other diseases, when they were found by the doctor and asked about the situation, the parents often didn't cooperate to answer, and they were often told that "it's okay, it's a little wrong." After the doctor told the parents, the parents did not trust and opposed to the doctor, which delayed the diagnosis.
(1) Transient tic disorder: It is also called tics or transient tic disorder. It usually starts after the age of 3 and is most common in the age of 4 to 7 years. It is the most common and lighter type. It is manifested by simple movements. The first part of a movement is often an alternating twitch that starts with a facial muscle group on the facial features, such as squeezing frowns, pursing lips, cavities, biting the lips and neck, Shrug and wait. As the above symptoms disappeared and gradually developed a few vocal tics, such as clearing the throat, coughing and roaring, blowing your nose, and making "ah" "ah" humming sounds. being noticed. The tics can be restrained by will for several minutes to hours. The nervousness, irritability, or poorness, or the aggravation of physical symptoms, and the symptoms disappear after falling asleep. Some children's symptoms are fixed in a certain place for 1 to 2 months. Some children's tics change There may be alternating episodes multiple times a day, lasting at least 2 weeks, but not more than 1 year. Symptoms of this type are milder and the treatment effect is better. In some cases, the symptoms resolve on their own. Patients are sensitive, shy and out of place, easily excited and excited. May be accompanied by enuresis night terrors or stuttering. [1]
Some of the main factors listed below that can cause tics in children are:
1. Maternal factors: high fever during pregnancy, history of dystocia, history of asphyxia, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, cesarean section, etc.
2. Infectious factors: upper respiratory tract infection, tonsillitis, mumps, rhinitis, pharyngitis, chickenpox, various types of encephalitis, viral hepatitis and so on.
3. Mental factors: scary, emotional, sad, watching thrilling TV, novels and irritating cartoons.
4. Family factors: parental tension, divorce, reprimand or scolding child, etc.
5. Others: such as epilepsy, trauma, carbon monoxide poisoning, toxic indigestion, allergies, etc.

IN OTHER LANGUAGES

Was this article helpful? Thanks for the feedback Thanks for the feedback

How can we help? How can we help?