학술논문

How does Tourette syndrome impact adolescents' daily living? A text mining study.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. Dec2023, Vol. 32 Issue 12, p2623-2635. 13p.
Subject
*TOURETTE syndrome
*ACTIVITIES of daily living
*INTERVIEWING
*SOCIAL stigma
*ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder
*CHILD psychopathology
*MENTAL depression
*RESEARCH funding
*FINANCIAL management
*DATA mining
*COMORBIDITY
*EVALUATION
*ADOLESCENCE
Language
ISSN
1018-8827
Abstract
Tourette syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disease in which clinical manifestations are essentially present during childhood and adolescence, corresponding to one of the critical development phases. However, its consequences on the daily lives of young patients have been insufficiently investigated. Here, we aimed to investigate this using a statistical text mining approach, allowing for the analysis of a large volume of free textual data. Sixty-two adolescents with Tourette syndrome participated in an interview in which they discussed their daily life (i) in school, (ii) at home, and (iii) with strangers, (iv) the aspect of Tourette syndrome which caused the most difficulty, and (v) their thoughts regarding their future as adults. Following data pre-processing, these corpora were analyzed separately using the IRAMUTEQ software through factorial correspondence analysis to identify the most commonly recurring topics of each corpus, and their relations with clinical features. The main difficulty corpus was directly related to comorbidities of Tourette syndrome. Daily life at home was correlated with executive functioning. Difficulties at school were related to a higher severity of tics. Thoughts regarding future daily life were worst for the youngest patients and were correlated with executive functioning and a higher depression score. Taken altogether, our results highlighted that social stigma was a pervasive topic among our corpora. From a clinical standpoint, tic severity was especially related to difficulties at school, while comorbidities had a high impact on social daily living and cost for managing both tics and symptoms of comorbidities. Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04179435. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]