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Mystery illness: More girls develop Tourette’s-like tics

Jan27
2012
6383 Commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fepilepsyassociation.com%2Fmystery-illness-more-girls-develop-tourettes-like-tics%2FMystery+illness%3A+More+girls+develop+Tourette%E2%80%99s-like+tics2012-01-27+19%3A11%3A35adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fepilepsyu.com%2F%3Fp%3D2188 Written by admin

A group of girls and now one boy in upstate New York suffer from Tourette’s Syndrome like symptoms. Specialists are hypothesizing that this is some form of conversion disorder, or a group-based psychological response, not due to external factors such as a poison.  Given the circumstances and symptoms, we find the proposed explanation hard to swallow. This story saddens our hearts and we hope the answer is found quickly and that the symptoms may somehow be reversed.

Here is the story as published on Today Health.

Jan. 27 update: Erin Brockovich is on the case! The environmental activist, made famous by the 2000 movie starring Julia Roberts as the crusading single mom, tells USA TODAY she is investigating the case of more than a dozen teens from one upstate New York school plagued by mysterious, Tourette’s-like symptoms. One neurologist who has seen most of the affected girls has diagnosed their illness as psychological in origin; but that diagnosis has been difficult for some parents and community members to accept. Brockovich told USA TODAY that at the request of local residents, she is looking into a 1970 train accident that spilled cyanide and an industrial solvent called trichloroethene close to the site of the Le Roy, New York school.

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“We don’t have all the answers, but we are suspicious,” Brockovich told the newspaper, which also reported that at least one boy has now come down with similar symptoms.

Originally published Jan. 26: The mystery surrounding the strange illness that has struck a group of teenage girls in upstate New York deepened this week as more teens developed the same Tourette’s-like symptoms.

Dr. Laszlo Mechtler, the neurologist who has seen and is treating 10 of the 12 girls originally struck by the puzzling illness, told NBC’s Amy Robach that more girls had recently reached out to him.

One of those girls, Chelsey Dummars, told Robach how those symptoms have changed her life.

“I was doing things,” Dummars said, her words punctuated by tics and grunts. “I was going places a lot before this happened. Now I don’t feel like even going to stores because I feel like people look at me and judge me.”

Dummars said she’s now being home-schooled because she doesn’t want to go out in public with her symptoms.

Like many of the parents of the affected girls, Dummars’s dad is distraught.

“To see her sit there and be broken to tears because she can’t handle it anymore … it rips your heart out,” said Dave Watson.

The mystery illness surfaced several months ago when 12 girls who had been attending the Le Roy high school began to display tics and involuntary verbal outbursts. Both the state and the local school district did extensive testing of the school grounds to see if there might be any signs of an infectious disease or some toxin the girls might have come in contact with. All those tests came back negative.

Mechtler has diagnosed the girls as having a rare condition called mass psychogenic illness, more familiarly known as mass hysteria. It doesn’t mean that their symptoms aren’t real, and painful – merely that they’re psychological in origin.

“This is a subconscious effect that occurs in patients who may be prone to anxiety or mood disorders,” Mechtler told TODAY’s Matt Lauer. “But these are definitely real symptoms.”

Mass psychogenic illness is a kind of conversion disorder, Robach reported. Conversion disorders occur when psychological stresses start to be expressed as physical symptoms.

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, NINDS, is currently conducting research on conversion disorders and is running a clinical trial to investigate uncontrollable shaking in people who have no known underlying brain or medical disorder.

The Le Roy students would be eligible to enroll in the trial, but officials can’t say whether any of them have signed up.

Regardless, not all the girls have accepted the diagnosis of mass psychogenic illness.

One of the original 12, Thera Sanchez, told TODAY, “I’m frustrated. No one’s giving us answers.”

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