The Open Neurosurgery Journal

2015, 7 : 9-11
Published online 2015 May 11. DOI: 10.2174/1876529701507010009
Publisher ID: TONEUROSJ-7-9

Botulinum Toxin for Ocular Tics

Gilad Yahalom , Achinoam Faust-Socher , Hanna Strauss , Sheera F. Lerman , Sharon Hassin-Baer and Oren S. Cohen
Department of Neurology, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer 52621, Israel.

ABSTRACT

Introduction:

Onabotulinum toxin A is an effective treatment for a variety of movement disorders; yet, results of efficacy in patients with medically-resistant tic disorders are insufficient. We aimed to assess the efficacy of Onabotulinum toxin A in patients with ocular tics in an observational study.

Methods:

Patients with ocular tics, regularly treated with Onabotulinum toxin A injections at our clinic, were enrolled for 2 visits, one of which was for baseline assessment and a single injection session and the second -a follow-up visit one month after treatment for evaluation of outcome. The assessment tools consisted of a 10-minute videotape recording which was scored later by a blinded rater. The calculated ocular tic frequency was the primary end-point of this study. Secondary outcome measures consisted of additional items obtained from the video recording as well as the motor subset of the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS-M) and the Clinical Global Impression of change (CGI-C).

Results:

Six patients were enrolled.Video recordings and rating of the ocular tics before and after treatment revealed a 37% reduction in mean tic frequency, a 2.18-fold prolongation of the time to the first tic following suppression and a reduction in tic frequency during and after suppression by 45% and 52%, respectively. The mean YGTSS-M decreased by 39%. Five patients reported an improvement in CGI-C while one reported no change.

Conclusions:

In this observational study, Onabotulinum toxin A was found to be an effective treatment for ocular tics, providing both subjective and objective benefit for a subset of patients.

Keywords:

Botulinum toxin , efficacy, ocular tics, tic disorder.