Ocd?

Updated on December 27, 2008
T.F. asks from Orlando, FL
7 answers

My 2 year old son has developed a habit-- he constantly touches his face. It started gradually a few weeks ago when I noticed him touching the side of his eye and I thought he may have something in it or it might be itchy for some reason. Then I noticed he kept asking for a napkin to wipe under his mouth, then he started using his shirt to wipe his mouth. Then my husband and I noticed he used his hand or shirt to wipe various parts of his face and it increased to the point where we would watch him play and count in our heads and notice that every 20-30 seconds he'd touch his face. This morning, he was doing it constantly- like every 5-10 seconds-- to the point where he was having trouble eating his breakfast. It does slow down when he's busy playing, but it never stops. I'm waiting for a call back from the doctor, but I thought I'd see if anyone else has any insight. We have a lot of allergies in the family, so I tried Benedryl just to rule out that he might be itchy, but not only did it not help, but really he touches different parts of his face, not just his eyes and nose. He was starting to get red near his mouth where he wipes a lot this morning with his shirt so we gave him a soft washcloth to use instead. If I hold his arms down he wiggles and tries to wipe his face on me. No, nothing has changed in his life since this started-- nothing for him to be stressed about-- no new baby, no new environment, no new detergents (I use all dye free and fragrence free stuff for the whole family and always have). His sleep habits are fine and nothing has changed in his diet. I use mostly home made cleaners in the house (like baking soda and vinegar) and have been for a long time. I am hoping it does turn out to be an allergy and some allergy meds will help, but we'll see what the doctor says. I looked up OCD and Tourettes and most articles say it's very, very rare for a toddler to actually have one of these, and that they are usually inherited (no one on either side of the family has any disorders like this)

*************UPDATE************
Here's what the doctor said... he didn't poo-poo it, which is good. He told me to watch and see if he does it in his sleep (which would mean it's neurological instead of behavioral)-- and so far so good, he doesn't do it in his sleep as far as I've seen. He said there are 2 approaches to a tic... one is to ignore it, and for his age that's what the doc recommends, and just to watch it for a couple of weeks and see if I can figure out a time when he does it the most to help pinpoint what could be triggering it. The other approach is more for if he was older-- he said if it's a habit, I could allow him to do it but restrict it in some way, like let him know it's OK to do it but he can only do it in his room, for example, and any time he's out of his room he isn't "allowed" to do it. (Sounds like an excellent way to get a child to gradually stop sucking their thumb!) What we've done is give him a soft baby washcloth (we call it his "soft") and we tell him to use that instead of his shirt, or his hand, or my pants, or the couch, or anything else he rubs his face on. Sometimes it helps slow him down because it makes him conscious of doing it and he stops to look for his soft, but it doesn't always help. I noticed so far today that it was gradual in the morning, increased throughout the day, and he almost stopped completely at one point while he was super involved in figuring out some stacking/nesting cups

What can I do next?

  • Add yourAnswer own comment
  • Ask your own question Add Question
  • Join the Mamapedia community Mamapedia
  • as inappropriate
  • this with your friends

More Answers

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

S.L.

answers from Boca Raton on

I wish i could help, let us know wht the doctor says!

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

E.D.

answers from Boca Raton on

My personal trainer's nephew has Tourette's syndrome. He was recently featured on a new televsion show, "The Doctors." The mom had footage that she had videotaped from a birthday party that her son attended when he was about the same age as your son, and one of the doctors said that was extremely helpful in diagnosing his condition, because with Tourettes the symptoms come and go, and change from one day to the next, so the diagnosis cannot always be made readily at a scheduled appointment. By the way, the boy is brilliant, and at age 14 has published two children's adventure books. This may or may not be the case with your son, but the sooner it is diagnosed, the better chance he has of being helped. There is also a recently published book, "Against Medical Advice," about one son's battle withthis condition. Good luck!

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

C.M.

answers from Port St. Lucie on

Hi Tammi,
It's a tough call but you've done the right thing contacting the Pediatrician. Don't let him/her blow it off though. The thing that caught me is that you mentioned it starting to get red aroundhis mouth. You don't want him to rub/wipe so much you end up with open sores and then when he does it again dirty fingers get something in it. I don't think it is to panic over but continue to be vigilant as you have been. You're doing great! Let me continue by starting with I am in no way making diagnosis but based on my background in teaching and my son's autism the biggest advice I have is to not try to hold his arms back,etc. If there is an internal motivator causing this such as tourette's or OCD or anything else, this will only cause the situation to be more difficult and stress him out more. I HIGHLY recommend looking at his diet. So much in what is going on with kids can in some way be connected to their diets. If it is an allergy believe or not it could start as topical. If he eats something that his hands have been all over and then touches his face and the allergy is topical, that is what is worsening it. If it is internal it too can cause this reaction. My daughter has 14 food allergies in addition to environmental allergies so we've been down this road many times. Look at his diet. First looking at the topical, is there any food or foods that he eats on a regular basis that tend to get messier than others. If so, take this food out of his diet for a week. You need to remove the food for at least a week to watch for changes and then reintroduce it slowly. As you are doing this keep a detailed journal (day you remove the food, what food it is, how often he had been eating it, changes in behavior, etc). Then do this as well with some of the major foods such as dairy, eggs, soy, nuts,etc. Start with one food at a time. If you are looking topical and remove something that is messy and say it is a dairy food - remove all dairy for a week. It will NOT hurt him nutritionally. I'll find the site for the Food Allergy & Anaphallxis network and send it to you but there are some great articles and such on there. Wheat/Gluten is another big one but be prepared because it is NOT easy to go without and it takes about 3 months to remove gluten fully from the system. (Can you tell I've been down this road before - actually with both kids). Your pediatrician may or not send him for allergy testing. There are two kinds. One is blood work called RAST testing. It is fairly accurate most of the time but some pediatricians don't believe it is accurate with you children. I don't agree. My daughter had this at age 1 and it was right on with the results. The skin testing my allergist told me can have false positives. It did for our daughter. But most of them again were right. The best thing is to pair the two, testing and food aviodance. I don't know where you live but if on the Treasure Coast I recommend Allergy Associates of the Palm Beaches. They are in Martin County and Palm Beach County. They're very nice.
Please let me know if you have more questions about the allergy side of things or behaviourally. I'm not an expert in any way but this is the life we live (allergies and odd behaviors). Again, you are doing great and being vigilant. Don't panic and be patient. He'll feel your stress.
Side note for part time work - I'm only throwing this out because of the difference this has made for me to tend to all of my children's needs - Pampered Chef! I've been with them for 8 years now and never intended to be. I could not imagine teaching right now. I've replaced my teacher's salary and work my own hours. If you want more info, let me know and I'm happy to help. No worries if not but wanted you to know the option is there.

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

T.M.

answers from Miami on

Hi, a student in my class does this. She has Asbergers Syndrome. Check in to that. Good luck!

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

B.P.

answers from Miami on

While I would have it checked, it might make you feel better to know that my middle son has gone through every "tic" in the universe before kindergarten. It started with blinking. He constantly blinked to the point we saw an eye doctor...nervous habit. Then he started picking his lip. Again nervous habit. He talked in his sleep. He chewed his food using his hold head bobbing up and down. We thought he had Tourette's or worse. All just "nervous habits of kids going through growing up" according to the nuerologist. So be assured that some things are just quirks and they outgrow them. We learned to ignore them and eventually they have all gone away and he is a well adjusted kindergartner.

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

N.I.

answers from Daytona Beach on

Hi Tammy,
The only thing I can think of is taking him to his pedriatician see what he says or go to Early Steps/Part C program for children with disabilities, they have them all around Florida. They give different assistance for babies and toddlers until the age of 3. They test them for everything and all free of charge. I don't know if this could help. But they helped us w/my just turned 3 little boy. Unfortunaly, I found out about it when he turned 2 and the time it took to process he only took about 7 months of speech and occupational therapy for his delayed. But eventhough we had insurance, they paid for all and were very nice and understanding. Now he turned 3 they refered him to Child Find where they placed him in pre-kinder w/special needs at the local elementary school. Hope it helps! good luck!

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

A.B.

answers from Jacksonville on

I am so glad you are noticing the subtle changes in your young child that many parents would overlook. It may be something very simple or it may be the beginning of a disorder that with proper treatment and therapy will allow him to function more normally as he grows. I would request to see an occupational therapist at Neumors and contact ChildFind. There are people out there who can help you fully evaluate him, but your WILL come across many who tell you there is nothing wrong and to just ignore it. Be your childs advocate no matter what. If you are unhappy with a doctors diagnosis, seek out a second opinion. Research a LOT on the internet, not to diagnos him yourself, but to possible find doctors out of our area that might be more willing to help. For now, I may be wrong, let him pick out something that he likes the feel of, a new stuffed animal with different or very soft textures. Put a little benedryl cream or hydrocoritsone cream on his face to help soothe any itch that might be there. And consider offering him an oppurtunity to wear a tight fitting beanie with a shin strap that covers his ears. Maybe the pressure would help alleviate the feelings he is having regarding his face. Try it, if it works, let him wear it even if he looks goofy. He may outgrow this and this. Let him carry the stuffed animal with him always to be able to fiddle with the "fur".

For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us

Related Questions

Related Searches