Does You or Someone in Your Family Have Tourette Syndrome? Join the Team Contributing DNA Toward a Cure.

Yale University’s Dr. Robert King will interview individuals and families interested in participating in the genetics sharing program January 24 and 25 at Rutgers University.

Piscataway, NJ, December 14, 2012 --(PR.com)-- Would you like to see more people working on a cure for Tourette Syndrome? How about research on medications specifically for TS? An opportunity to join the New Jersey Center for Tourette Syndrome & Associated Disorders’ (NJCTS) efforts and personally be part of making that happen is coming soon.

Dr. Robert King, a professor of child psychiatry at the Yale University Medical School and medical director of the TS/OCD Clinic at the Yale University Child Study Center, will be at the Cell and DNA Repository at Rutgers University on Thursday and Friday, January 24 and 25, to interview individuals and families interested in participating in the National Institute of Mental Health NJCTS Genetics Sharing Program.

For more information or to schedule an appointment with Dr. King, please e-mail Dr. Gary Heiman, a team leader at the repository, at familystudy@biology.rutgers.edu.

"The major stumbling block to doing research on Tourette Syndrome has been a lack of DNA samples," according to Dr. Jay A. Tischfield, Director of the Human Genetics Institute at Rutgers University and a researcher on TS for more than 40 years. "You can't just do research on samples from five or 10 people. You need hundreds if not thousands of samples because the disease itself is very heterogeneous – meaning it doesn't have the same cause in everybody."

For more information, please call NJCTS at 908-575-7350 or visit http://www.njcts.org. You also can download the repository brochure at http://www.tourettesyndromeresearch.org or see the event listings at http://www.facebook.com/TouretteSyndrome.
Contact
New Jersey Center for Tourette Syndrome
Jeff Weber
908-575-7350
www.njcts.org
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