• J Affect Disord · Aug 2016

    Suicidal ideation in youth with tic disorders.

    • Carly Johnco, Joseph F McGuire, Nicole M McBride, Tanya K Murphy, Adam B Lewin, and Eric A Storch.
    • Department of Pediatrics, University of South Florida, USA; Centre for Emotional Health, Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. Electronic address: carly.johnco@mq.edu.au.
    • J Affect Disord. 2016 Aug 1; 200: 204-11.

    BackgroundThis study examined the incidence and clinical correlates of suicidal ideation (SI) in youth with tic disorders (TD). The independent contribution of tics, anxiety, depressive and externalizing symptoms on SI severity in youth with TD was assessed.MethodParticipants were 75 treatment-seeking youth with a TD (N=75) aged 6-18. Participants completed diagnostic assessments, clinician-ratings, self- and parent-report measures of emotional functioning and the presence and/or severity of suicidal ideation.ResultsBased on youth-report, 61% of youth endorsed at least some symptoms of SI, and 8% endorsed symptoms that exceeded the clinically significant cut-off. Parents reported SI in 11% of cases, with generally poor agreement between parent- and youth-report. Suicidal ideation correlated with higher anxiety, depressive and externalizing symptoms, affective lability, and with poorer distress tolerance and overall functioning. Anxiety, depressive and externalizing symptoms showed an independent relationship with SI. Tic severity was not associated with SI. Rather, higher tic severity was associated with an increase in anxiety symptoms, which in turn, was associated with greater SI severity.LimitationsCross-sectional data limits causal conclusions. Diagnosis was based on unstructured assessments by expert clinicians, including consensus diagnosis, rather than structured clinical interviews.ConclusionsAround 8-11% of youth with TD experienced SI. Tic severity did not have any direct influence on SI, however the presence of comorbid anxiety and depressive symptoms significantly increases this risk. Results suggest that it is psychiatric comorbidity, rather than tics themselves, that predispose youth with tic disorders to increased risk of suicidality.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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