Overall, Tourette’s Syndrome is not an uncommon disorder. Especially in the pediatric population, there is a trend of increasing incidence year by year. The specific causes of tic disorders are not particularly well understood. In the course of my clinical practice, parents often ask how this disease is acquired and how to prevent it. Based on the current level of technology, these two questions cannot be explained clearly. If we do not know the exact cause of the disease and have no means of prevention, what should we do if we get the disease? Parents of children with Tourette’s syndrome need not be particularly worried, because although the incidence of pediatric tics is high, most of them (about 70%) can be cured without any treatment, and the percentage is still quite high. Usually, the tic symptoms will gradually subside after adolescence. During the period of illness, if the twitching is not particularly severe, it can be treated without any treatment. If the twitching is really heavy, such as violent limb twitching, fidgeting, or frequent vocal twitching, which affects others and prevents normal school attendance, you need to take some medication to control the twitching symptoms. Once you take the medication, you need to take it for a long enough time and in a large enough dose. It is important not to take the medication for three days and stop it as soon as the symptoms are reduced, but to take the full amount of time. There are a small number of children who are still very symptomatic with the medication, even so, children younger than 14 years old should not consider surgery. After all, the growth is not complete, and I personally do not think that either minimally invasive pacemakers or destructive surgery is appropriate. Adhering to medication is the right choice.