Watch as tiny shocks ‘turn off’ Tourette Syndrome tics

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024

Комментарии • 150

  • @andrewnash4041
    @andrewnash4041 2 года назад +128

    I thought about ending tourette by ending myself since I was quite tired dealing with it and its impact on my social & academic life. Then I talked to myself, what if a effective treatment becomes available after my death? Now, I plan to bravely face and solve any challenges while keeping a hope that there will be an effective treatment in the near! future

  • @alanstjohns
    @alanstjohns 3 года назад +44

    Let's hope it is THE breakthrough many, many people wish for

  • @ZachyWacky0
    @ZachyWacky0 11 месяцев назад +21

    I cry every night because my family says im loud and annoying, but i cant help it and i have tics, im scared to tell my parents, beacuse im embaress

    • @niahp1377
      @niahp1377 11 месяцев назад +1

      Don’t be afraid to tell them they need to know a lot of people are not educated in it I’ve had it for years now I understand how you feel but you have to tell them schedule a doctors visit with them

    • @OneStepBeyond789
      @OneStepBeyond789 10 месяцев назад +1

      If you are afraid to tell your parents, tell your doctor or a teacher, ask them to help you. But if you can, please tell your parents as their reaction may surprise you! Tell someone soon, ok? ❤❤

    • @PeteJones-ch3te
      @PeteJones-ch3te 7 месяцев назад

      It's time to grow up there is no such thing as Tourette syndrome spoiled stupid young people

    • @thabelaishramot5266
      @thabelaishramot5266 13 дней назад +1

      Same here, now my condition getting worse and in very tired , I can't even breath properly, it's so hard to deal

  • @stephena4113
    @stephena4113 2 месяца назад +2

    Quitting smoking anything and less caffeine has decreased mine IMMENSELY

  • @andrewnash4041
    @andrewnash4041 2 года назад +8

    Hope that works! A lot of people are waiting here.

  • @shani-jj2ks
    @shani-jj2ks 2 года назад +70

    I have a friend in my class named Austin and he has tics. He sometimes does face squinching and whenever he's talking to the teacher he does it too. I asked him why he did that and he said it's called "tics". I felt bad for Austin and he is actually doing very well and he is very smart.

    • @coralcat5706
      @coralcat5706 Год назад +5

      Being smarter is actually one of the qualities of Tic syndromes!

    • @andrewnash4041
      @andrewnash4041 Год назад +3

      @@coralcat5706 agree, no idea why though

    • @coralcat5706
      @coralcat5706 Год назад +2

      @@andrewnash4041 Yeah, and I'm sure there are exceptions, it's just common.

    • @id.rather.not_
      @id.rather.not_ Год назад +17

      @@coralcat5706 thats not true at all, i have tourettes, it does not affect your cognitive ability at all. Its not a learning disability nor enhancer. We are just people with a motor malfuction

    • @SeminarioMAE
      @SeminarioMAE 3 месяца назад

      boring

  • @Nathan-ed3tx
    @Nathan-ed3tx 2 года назад +16

    I would love to take part in this

  • @33hock
    @33hock 3 года назад +16

    Here's my money.Please God make it work

    • @AtomicEy
      @AtomicEy 7 месяцев назад

      where? i see no money

  • @Nathan-ed3tx
    @Nathan-ed3tx 2 года назад +13

    I have Tourette’s and had it since I was 7 I’m 18 now and this would be fantastic I definitely need one of these

  • @khalidh3091
    @khalidh3091 3 года назад +24

    I thinks that the little chock diverts your attention from ticing. Tics are all about attention, the urge to tic aka "compulsion" literally eats your attention.

  • @brianbordenkircher52
    @brianbordenkircher52 Год назад +15

    Interesting. But for me, I found some tics increased for my FND when I used a TENS machine, so I'm curious. Though, then again, if the right area is stimulated, I could see how this could perhaps make sense. Very interesting. I get tics, similar to tourettes and muscle tenses kinda similar to parkinsons. Kinda messes with walking sometimes. Makes me unable to speak often. Other times, now I yell random thoughts, repeat what I am hearing, like what others are saying. I yell out loud what I am reading, have a tendancy to repeat things 3-4 times often, as I do with sneezes. I post a bit about my FND disorder

  • @jpalmer4743
    @jpalmer4743 3 года назад +3

    So basically blocking the urge to tick

  • @three1seven419
    @three1seven419 5 месяцев назад +1

    Any updates on the device?

  • @Samisback-
    @Samisback- Год назад +2

    How can I enrol on this voluntary experiment, I’ve suffered with eye Tourette syndrome my whole life but gets worse when I’ve woken tired or when it’s sunny then it becomes unbearable to control and this will last either all day or for hours

  • @samuelbrito571
    @samuelbrito571 5 месяцев назад

    I cant wait for this to be available

  • @jamie1202
    @jamie1202 2 года назад +2

    I have tics I think this electronic band would help me how do I get one

  • @secretservice1816
    @secretservice1816 Год назад +2

    Brilliant!

  • @dietmntdew
    @dietmntdew Месяц назад

    My brother is 7 and he’s has tics. He doesn’t even say swear words but those are his tics

  • @garywatson5617
    @garywatson5617 7 месяцев назад +1

    I'm 70, had tics as long as I can remember. Been tormented and teased my whole life. I wish someone could find a definite cure.

  • @henryzhao4622
    @henryzhao4622 2 месяца назад

    PSA: do this with a TENS unit and us the Washington university thing

  • @lam001
    @lam001 3 года назад +5

    May i know how i can buy it from overseas? Thanks a lot.

    • @pinkeyed_pikachu3446
      @pinkeyed_pikachu3446 2 года назад +1

      You can’t buy it yet it’s currently in the first beta testing, im in the clinical trial waiting for it to get fitted actually

    • @amiragaber5288
      @amiragaber5288 2 года назад +1

      @@pinkeyed_pikachu3446 did you finish your trial ???what is your feed back plz?

    • @netavopisalas3669
      @netavopisalas3669 Год назад

      @@pinkeyed_pikachu3446 hello?

  • @matthewfx99
    @matthewfx99 2 года назад +3

    Where can someone buy this wrist watch ?

  • @saff1257
    @saff1257 4 года назад +8

    will this ever be for sale? do you think you could ever make these for people to buy?

    • @DylanF
      @DylanF 4 года назад +1

      I've put myself forward for concept ideas and studies for this device. I'm hopeful it'll be useable.

    • @theonlymessenger
      @theonlymessenger 4 года назад

      Obviously you have not exhausted all medical avenues.

    • @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter
      @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter 3 месяца назад

      Meds don't work. The only thing available to us are anti-psychotics. They ruin your life and don't stop tics.

  • @Gatesmusic98
    @Gatesmusic98 10 месяцев назад +1

    How much is it?

  • @shan5963
    @shan5963 4 месяца назад +1

    Shocks? Really? I understand it may stop them, but what kind of damage are these "shocks" doing LONG term?

  • @mattdouglas697
    @mattdouglas697 3 года назад +16

    I don’t think it turns the tics off I thought it was to reduce the urge and strength of the tics

    • @lam001
      @lam001 3 года назад +3

      Thats too enough

    • @thefoxyredfox6739
      @thefoxyredfox6739 3 года назад +12

      I have tourette , just reducing the urge would be the best day of my life :'( :)

    • @Idontknowlol595
      @Idontknowlol595 Год назад

      @@thefoxyredfox6739 have you gotten it checked out I h th ought I had it until I had 2 seizures I’m on keppra because I was diagnosed with myoclonic epilepsy

    • @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter
      @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter 3 месяца назад

      Tourettes isn't the same

  • @Ubermensch9240
    @Ubermensch9240 2 месяца назад

    At least it isn't a shock collar. Why are those so cheap to buy?

  • @HarryGlaister-v6q
    @HarryGlaister-v6q 3 месяца назад +1

    I have torets

  • @alistairwest6346
    @alistairwest6346 4 года назад +3

    Awesome

  • @conradcodfish8638
    @conradcodfish8638 Год назад +2

    I reduced my tics with weed.

  • @burgerbatos
    @burgerbatos 4 месяца назад

    Give me that.

  • @liampardoe2877
    @liampardoe2877 Год назад +1

    How do it get this? Ive had it 30 years and im tired

  • @Idontknowlol595
    @Idontknowlol595 Год назад

    Be careful as these can also be myoclonic seizures which turn into a seizure

  • @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter
    @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter 3 месяца назад

    I'm 42. Tourettes dominates my life. Most people don't know that I have it. They don't see what I'm like when I'm tired and when it's kept me awake all night. It's 2am now, I've not slept for hours. Is this available to get now? This would transform everything.

  • @TangibleReads
    @TangibleReads 8 дней назад

    you think you can imitate this with a TENS machine

  • @christopher3443
    @christopher3443 Год назад +1

    I have Tourette syndrome. Is this available

  • @Marychelle
    @Marychelle 4 года назад +1

    Pretty cool.

  • @andrewnash4041
    @andrewnash4041 2 года назад

    come to Boston and I will make you guys a cup of England breakfast tea

  • @poweryx9965
    @poweryx9965 2 года назад

    Shouldn't it have side effect? Tics probly not the only activities it can have an impact on, but lessss gooo plz make it and for mild cases too

  • @riverzala9186
    @riverzala9186 3 года назад +1

    Where do u get the device?

    • @RachelHellen23
      @RachelHellen23 3 года назад

      It’s an experiment for Nottingham university, I’m doing it and you can’t get it you have to sign up but not everyone gets in

    • @mattdouglas697
      @mattdouglas697 3 года назад +1

      Apparently the nhs is thinking by the end of 2021 they will be available for severe cases

    • @phoenixlu
      @phoenixlu 2 года назад

      It looks like a TENS machine, to me

    • @azroymanja
      @azroymanja 7 месяцев назад

      More details ​@@RachelHellen23

  • @Nielss5913
    @Nielss5913 5 месяцев назад

    Agree i hope 2026 will be soon! Im waiting for 47 years on this!

  • @PeacepixysAlchemy09
    @PeacepixysAlchemy09 6 месяцев назад

    Could this manifest with restless leg syndrome?

  • @fisshuman
    @fisshuman 6 месяцев назад

    I found this syndrome from movie about a man who wants to be teacher but he had the syndrome. I didn't know what it is at all before it and now I realize one of my friends who were called "Autistic" kid turns out it's just a syndrome. He tick his head just like the green shirt boy in the video and sometimes his hand too.
    His mom tell our teacher that it's an autism. Damn.
    Now it's all makes sense that he doesn't have autism because he talk and behaves just like normal person do and he doesn't seem to have special ability or talent.

  • @bartholomewtott3812
    @bartholomewtott3812 4 года назад +1

    Most of these kind of studies can't be replicated.

    • @ssotkow
      @ssotkow 4 года назад +2

      Right, these experiments need to be consistently replicated in different lab settings to be substantiated by peer-review scientific community in order for this study to not be deemed a coincidental anomaly.

    • @MrGlennJohnsen
      @MrGlennJohnsen 4 года назад

      From my knowledge there's no such thing as "one type of Tourette Syndrome", making it very hard to find or make a "one fix all" type of treatment. What experiments like this (in the past) has shown is that there's a connection between nerves and the loss of impulse control, for some with Tourette Syndrome it (as this study shows) can help to 'trigger' the nerve system to mitigate or even stop tics. Just because something isn't replicable in all Tourette Syndrome patients doesn't mean it's ineffective.

    • @bartholomewtott3812
      @bartholomewtott3812 4 года назад

      @@MrGlennJohnsen no one said anything about all Tourettes sufferers

  • @MrGlennJohnsen
    @MrGlennJohnsen 4 года назад +2

    This man reminded me so much of someone... then I figured it out, he looks like Sean Bean!

  • @bugnut82
    @bugnut82 2 года назад +1

    can I use a dogs shock collar for the same effect ?

    • @netavopisalas3669
      @netavopisalas3669 Год назад +4

      😂 I feel you bro how desperately we just need something, just fkng something....

  • @bartholomewtott3812
    @bartholomewtott3812 4 года назад +6

    Double blind studies please. We are in the midst of replication crisis.

    • @pencilfriendpaperscribbler6032
      @pencilfriendpaperscribbler6032 4 года назад +2

      Unbelievable ignorance. Clearly, you don’t even know what that term means. How is it possible to have a 'double blind study' in such a situation? What are you testing? Electricity? If you shock people who don’t have Tourettes they’re going to feel a shock. What will that prove? Another example of someone glorying in their own stupidity, celebrating it and encouraging others to do the same out of some sort of antagonism towards the sciences, or perhaps thinking in general.

    • @bartholomewtott3812
      @bartholomewtott3812 4 года назад +1

      @@pencilfriendpaperscribbler6032 you're talking about a control study.
      A double blind study is one that tries to reproduce the result as independently as possible. E.g seperate lab seperate team. With as little influence as possible on each other. Hence 'blind'.
      Dont comment on things you dont understand.

    • @pencilfriendpaperscribbler6032
      @pencilfriendpaperscribbler6032 4 года назад +4

      Bartholomew Tott No, for a double blind study, both the participants and the doctors administering can have no knowledge of whether or not the participants are receiving a placebo or the treatment. Hence the term: Double Blind. Are you suggesting a study in which both people with Tourettes and those without, are shocked? First of all, everyone is going to react to the shock by feeling as though they have had a shock. Congratulations, you have discovered electricity. Secondly, if the shock doesn’t mitigate the symptoms in those patients with Tourettes, they will manifest Tourettes symptoms, thereby destroying any anonymity and the entire basis of the study. Are you suggesting that random people and Tourettes suffers shock themselves in secret and self-report? Are you saying there’s a placebo for electricity? Are you planning on pinching some people and shocking others? Are you saying that electricity is an unknown quantity that needs a control group? Do please, design this study for us.

    • @_Rambley_is_adorable_
      @_Rambley_is_adorable_ 4 года назад

      I nnever have tics...

    • @tobymiranda9451
      @tobymiranda9451 4 года назад +1

      @@bartholomewtott3812 you my friend, are terribly wrong 😂

  • @daicekube
    @daicekube Год назад

    Not involuntary at all. It's like you do what is totally wrong to do. If your are supposed to be silent, you can't. If you are supposed to be still, you can't. TS/OCD is that you do what you can't do. Like Coprolalia. It isn't involuntary to say/shout lots of dirty words. It's what you can't do - and still do.

    • @U286BRAINZ
      @U286BRAINZ Год назад +2

      I have TS, and that is absolutely not true LMAO. This comment is ridiculous. It’s completely involuntary, it’s not like someone says “be quiet” and all of a sudden I’m going to be loud. Idk where you got that info/idea from….

    • @daicekube
      @daicekube Год назад

      @@U286BRAINZ OK, so you say it's a spasm? A nervous discharge? How do you explain coprolalia? What spasm will make you utter four letter words?

    • @U286BRAINZ
      @U286BRAINZ Год назад +1

      @@daicekube tics are when your brain sends an involuntary signal to the body. That signal tells the body to do a movement we don’t need or mean to do. Coprolalia isn’t voluntary. If it was, I and 10% of other Tourette’s havers wouldn’t possess it.

    • @U286BRAINZ
      @U286BRAINZ Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/2KrRerjfBMY/видео.html

    • @penguinlim
      @penguinlim 8 месяцев назад +1

      yes you're correct in that it isn't involuntary. it's better described as unvoluntary. tics can be suppressed (which means they aren't involuntary like a muscle spasm), but the immense, powerful urge to tic inevitably will override any conscious effort to suppress them
      coprolalia, much like other complex tics (echopraxia, echolalia, palilalia, etc) is not too well understood, but the denial and blame you're putting on sufferers is not helpful, practical, or moral (whether you intend to harm people or not)
      people with TS don't think "oh wow, this tic is so devious, I'm going to do it!", they think "oh my gosh I'm going to do this tic, I can't suppress it any longer. I hope no one notices"

  • @JoseHernandez-ql8vw
    @JoseHernandez-ql8vw 3 месяца назад

    nose ring is awful

  • @PeteJones-ch3te
    @PeteJones-ch3te 7 месяцев назад

    There is no such thing as Tourette Syndrome what it's called is attention

    • @samuelbrito571
      @samuelbrito571 5 месяцев назад +1

      Your tinfoil hat is a little too tight. Tourette's syndrome is real. Believe me.

    • @tuckerboatman8211
      @tuckerboatman8211 4 месяца назад +1

      You think I enjoy feeling like my eye lids are stuck in the corners so I open them wide and do this 5-10 times until it feels like the itch has been scratched. You think I enjoy clenching my jaw, and arm muscles constantly. Does it sound like I want the attention I get when I bend my right knee and lift my leg in a way that looks like I'm adjusting my nuts? The constant sniffing, grunting, throat clearing is fucking loads of fun to do when I want attention. I absolutely love holding my breath for what feels like it could be my last breath. Right up to the point that I feel i have finally scratched that itch for attention and I can once again breathe. My favorite part about that specific attempt at attention seeking is knowing I'm going to do it over and over again for maybe 10min or a couple hours while no one else is even around. I'm so upset about this comment. The idea of anyone thinking my plan every day is to act like a fu**ING uncontrollable spaz and hopefully, I could gain some much needed "attention" is ridiculous.

  • @nineEIGHTstangGT
    @nineEIGHTstangGT 4 года назад +4

    This a girl or a guy

    • @eliseangell7763
      @eliseangell7763 4 года назад +11

      It doesn't matter

    • @eliseangell7763
      @eliseangell7763 4 года назад +6

      They could be neither or both, or gender non-conforming. Overall it doesn't matter as they are a person.

    • @FlaviusFlav
      @FlaviusFlav 9 месяцев назад

      Doesn't matter, they're hot af

  • @DTIVO16
    @DTIVO16 4 года назад

    Psychopaths would suggest shock treatment.

  • @MrSmithgobucs
    @MrSmithgobucs 4 года назад +1

    So South Park was right

  • @CM-mo7mv
    @CM-mo7mv 4 года назад

    Corporal punishment works?! 😱 Next on the Onion.

    • @DylanF
      @DylanF 4 года назад +1

      It's not though. The headline is sensational. It's delivers stimulation to the nerves, it does not shock you.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 4 года назад

      @@DylanF Again that's exactly what electrical stimulation is... A mild, but still technically electric *shock*.

    • @DylanF
      @DylanF 4 года назад

      ​@@MadScientist267 Urgh. Okay. Right, 'technically' isn't being described in this article. It's an overview of device. 'Technically' might be right in a technical scientific sense. Not right in an English grammatical sense; it gives the wrong connotations. That's my point.

    • @DylanF
      @DylanF 4 года назад

      @@MadScientist267 More over, if you're scientifically minded you should be arguing that fact that isn't corporal punishment and this device actually does. Not just arguing with me the semantics of what the word 'shock' means.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 4 года назад

      @@DylanF Ok point taken about the word "shock"... As for the trolls, I leave them be... They just occasionally lead to something better... Like this ;)

  • @sislertx
    @sislertx 4 года назад +1

    Good grief..sounds like a learned behavior

    • @DylanF
      @DylanF 4 года назад +20

      Tourette's isn't learnt behaviour. It's a condition of the nervous system and brain.

    • @BriedisLTU
      @BriedisLTU 3 года назад +3

      Your ignorance or stupidity is clearly learned behavior

    • @k_rodeo
      @k_rodeo Год назад +4

      As someone with Tourette’s, I wish it was a learned behavior. This disorder is fvcking medieval torture.

  • @ericdraven4993
    @ericdraven4993 Год назад

    Maybe this explains why i feel like i have to " stretch" my eyes. i must look crazy 🤪