TICS OF THE NOSE—SNIFFING TICS
The form these tics commonly take is a puckering of the nostrils to the more or less noisy accompaniment of a nasal inspiration or expiration, associated usually with curling of the upper lip. They are principally the sequel to some coryza, or inflammation, or some little nasal fissure or furuncle, and in their essence constitute a derangement of a complex functional act intended to ensure the dislodgment of any obstruction in the respiratory passages of the nose, in which act the muscles of inspiration or of expiration bilaterally co-operate. Where the contraction of the nose muscles is unilateral, it is generally part and parcel of a facial grimace confined to that side, and therefore an anomaly of mimicry.
As for the pathogenic mechanism of the sniffing tic, it is simple enough. Some little passing obstacle in the air-ways, some minute, irritating sore, supply the occasion for an expiratory reaction, in the first instance, with wrinkling of the nose and dilatation of the nostrils, the repetition of which with each fresh sensation of discomfort or of pain speedily becomes automatic, and persists as a tic when mucus or abrasion has disappeared. So far from being obstinate, these tics are eminently amenable to treatment if they are uncomplicated. We have remarked on their occurrence, by the way, in the case of O. and his sister, in young J., in G., in the wife of S., etc.