D R Coghill1, S Seth1, K Matthews1. 1. Division of Neuroscience, Medical Research Institute,University of Dundee,Ninewells Hospital, Dundee,UK.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been associated with a broad range of deficits across various neuropsychological domains, most studies have assessed only a narrow range of neuropsychological functions. Direct cross-domain comparisons are rare, with almost all studies restricted to less than four domains. Therefore, the relationships between these various domains remain undefined. In addition, almost all studies included previously medicated participants, limiting the conclusions that can be drawn. We present the first study to compare a large cohort of medication-naive boys with ADHD with healthy controls on a broad battery of neuropsychological tasks, assessing six key domains of neuropsychological functioning. METHOD: The neuropsychological functioning of 83 medication-naive boys with well-characterized ADHD (mean age 8.9 years) was compared with that of 66 typically developing (TYP) boys (mean age 9.0 years) on a broad battery of validated neuropsychological tasks. RESULTS: Data reduction using complementary factor analysis (CFA) confirmed six distinct neuropsychological domains: working memory, inhibition, delay aversion, decision making, timing and response variability. Boys with ADHD performed less well across all six domains although, for each domain, only a minority of boys with ADHD had a deficit [effect size (% with deficit) ADHD versus TYP: working memory 0.95 (30.1), inhibition 0.61 (22.9), delay aversion 0.82 (36.1), decision making 0.55 (20.5), timing 0.71 (31.3), response variability 0.37 (18.1)]. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical syndrome of ADHD is neuropsychologically heterogeneous. These data highlight the complexity of the relationships between the different neuropsychological profiles associated with ADHD and the clinical symptoms and functional impairment.
BACKGROUND: Although attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been associated with a broad range of deficits across various neuropsychological domains, most studies have assessed only a narrow range of neuropsychological functions. Direct cross-domain comparisons are rare, with almost all studies restricted to less than four domains. Therefore, the relationships between these various domains remain undefined. In addition, almost all studies included previously medicated participants, limiting the conclusions that can be drawn. We present the first study to compare a large cohort of medication-naive boys with ADHD with healthy controls on a broad battery of neuropsychological tasks, assessing six key domains of neuropsychological functioning. METHOD: The neuropsychological functioning of 83 medication-naive boys with well-characterized ADHD (mean age 8.9 years) was compared with that of 66 typically developing (TYP) boys (mean age 9.0 years) on a broad battery of validated neuropsychological tasks. RESULTS: Data reduction using complementary factor analysis (CFA) confirmed six distinct neuropsychological domains: working memory, inhibition, delay aversion, decision making, timing and response variability. Boys with ADHD performed less well across all six domains although, for each domain, only a minority of boys with ADHD had a deficit [effect size (% with deficit) ADHD versus TYP: working memory 0.95 (30.1), inhibition 0.61 (22.9), delay aversion 0.82 (36.1), decision making 0.55 (20.5), timing 0.71 (31.3), response variability 0.37 (18.1)]. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical syndrome of ADHD is neuropsychologically heterogeneous. These data highlight the complexity of the relationships between the different neuropsychological profiles associated with ADHD and the clinical symptoms and functional impairment.
Authors: Jeanette C Mostert; Martine Hoogman; A Marten H Onnink; Daan van Rooij; Daniel von Rhein; Kimm J E van Hulzen; Janneke Dammers; Cornelis C Kan; Jan K Buitelaar; David G Norris; Barbara Franke Journal: J Atten Disord Date: 2015-09-14 Impact factor: 3.256
Authors: Michael J Kofler; Lauren N Irwin; Elia F Soto; Nicole B Groves; Sherelle L Harmon; Dustin E Sarver Journal: J Abnorm Child Psychol Date: 2019-02
Authors: Jeanette C Mostert; A Marten H Onnink; Barbara Franke; Martine Hoogman; Marieke Klein; Janneke Dammers; Anais Harneit; Theresa Schulten; Kimm J E van Hulzen; Cornelis C Kan; Dorine Slaats-Willemse; Jan K Buitelaar Journal: Eur Neuropsychopharmacol Date: 2015-08-21 Impact factor: 4.600