Abstract Tourette syndrome (TS) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterised by repetitive motor and phonic tics, affecting approximately 1 in 160 children. Despite recent advances in neurostimulation — including the NICE-approved Neupulse wrist device, which achieves approximately 25% reduction in tic frequency through rhythmic median nerve stimulation — no formal mechanistic account exists of which specific oscillatory variable is operative, why that variable is clinically relevant, or what determines the ceiling of peripheral stimulation approaches. This paper provides that mechanistic account. We present a five-stage model of circuit failure in TS, grounded in the cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) literature, identifying the thalamo-frontal alpha gating mechanism — the rhythmic 8-12 Hz oscillation generated by the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) that governs the temporal window for cortico-thalamic return signalling — as the operative variable in tic generation. We demonstrate that reduced thalamo-frontal alpha coherence is the proximal circuit event preceding tic onset, that the peripheral stimulation approach works by entraining this mechanism indirectly through ascending sensory input, and that the 25% ceiling is a structural consequence of the peripheral route rather than a device limitation. From this account we derive three falsifiable therapeutic hypotheses that are predicted to exceed the current ceiling: (1) direct thalamo-frontal entrainment using 10 Hz transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS), predicted to achieve substantially higher tic suppression by targeting the gating mechanism directly; (2) closed-loop neurofeedback targeting thalamo-frontal alpha coherence, predicted to produce durable tic reduction through volitional TRN self-regulation; and (3) an intraoperative targeting criterion for deep brain stimulation (DBS) based on alpha coherence restoration, predicted to improve outcomes in refractory cases beyond current anatomical placement approaches. We additionally provide a neurophysiological reframing of the premonitory urge as an incomplete cortico-thalamic return cycle, yielding specific, mechanistically-grounded predictions for Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics (CBIT) timing parameters that are currently absent from the literature. These contributions are grounded entirely in the neurophysiological literature. They are falsifiable, clinically actionable without new device development, and collectively constitute the theoretical infrastructure for the next generation of Tourette syndrome intervention.
Clifford Conway (Thu,) studied this question.