| Literature DB >> 33192633 |
Marios Adamou1, Tim Fullen2, Sarah L Jones2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is a common neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by symptoms of inattention, hyperactivity and or impulsivity. Since the development of the concept, a reliable biomarker to aid diagnosis has been sought. One potential method is the use of electroencephalogram to measure neuronal activity. The aim of this review is to provide an up to date synthesis of the literature surrounding the potential use of electroencephalogram for diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; clinical psychology; diagnosis; electroencephalogram; neuroimaging
Year: 2020 PMID: 33192633 PMCID: PMC7477352 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram (21).
Characteristics of the studies included in the review.
| Study First author, year, country | Methodology | Demographics | Sample Size | Main findings | Quality rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biederman, 2017, US ( | Collected EEG while the subjects were performing Go/NoGo task. Applied spatio-temporal BNA analysis | Nonmedicated right-handed 18 to 55 year old adults of both sexes with and without a DSM-IV diagnosis of ADHD | BNA methodology demonstrated a high discriminative capacity between ADHD patients and controls based on functional brain connectivity | 18 (excellent) | |
| Bresnahan, 2002, Australia ( | Resting state eyes open 2-min condition. 24-channel digital signal-processing at 17 sites. Between groups comparison | Excluded comorbid psychiatric disorder, neurological impairment, and substance disorder. Mean age 31.5 years | ADHD group differed from both the non-ADHD and the control groups on the basis of elevated theta activity. ADHD and control groups did not differ in beta activity, but relative theta was reduced and relative beta power was elevated in the non-ADHD group compared with both the ADHD and control groups | 17 (good) | |
| Broyd, 2011, UK ( | 66 channel electrode measuring at rest and task condition. Within and between group analysis | Excluded diagnosed neurological disorder, consumed caffeine within the 2 h prior to testing, had used any psychotropic substance (illicit or otherwise) in the 24 h prior to testing, and/or more than once a month in the previous six months. Mean age 22.25 years | Deactivation of VLF EEG power between the rest and task condition for the whole sample, deactivation sources were different for high and low ADHD groups: in the low ADHD group attention-induced VLF EEG deactivation was most significant in medial prefrontal regions while for the high ADHD group this deactivation was predominantly localized to the temporal lobes | 13 (fair) | |
| Gonen-Yaacovi, 2016, Israel ( | Trial-by-trial EEG response variability to visual and auditory stimuli while subjects' attention was diverted to an unrelated task at the fixation cross | Mean age 25 years. ADHD individuals taking stimulants were instructed to abstain from medication for at least 24 h before participation. Confirmed diagnosis of ADHD. Three ADHD participants also showed comorbidity. Groups were matched on general intelligence | Larger response variability in the ADHD group for visual and auditory stimuli compared to controls | 15 (good) | |
| Hale, 2010, US ( | 40 electrodes using the International 10/20 locations system. EEG recording at 2 baselines lasting 5 min each eyes open and eyes closed and a cognitive activation condition. Within and between group analysis. | Excluded if taking psychoactive medication, reported neurological disorder, or diagnosis of schizophrenia or autism, or IQ < 80. | Adults with ADHD showed pronounced rightward beta asymmetry in inferior parietal regions (P8–P7) during CPT | 17 (good) | |
| Hale, 2014, US ( | * | * | * | Abnormal rightward inferior parietal beta asymmetry in adults with ADHD during the CPT, Rightward beta and theta asymmetry across inferior, superior, and temporal-parietal brain regions, and showed that rightward parietal asymmetry in ADHD was atypically associated with multiple cognitive tests | 17 (good) |
| Hasler, 2016, Switzerland ( | Functional mechanisms of attention deficits explored using activities associated with bottom-up attentional cueing (temporal and spatial orienting of attention) and top-down control (conflict resolution) | ADHD group mean age 40.05 years. Excluded nonnormal visual acuity, history of major medical disorders, head injury, neurological disorders, and alcohol or drug abuse. Other current psychiatric disorders were exclusion criteria for ADHD patients | ADHD reduced P3 amplitude, preparatory activation in both alpha and beta bands, as well as flattened target-related posterior alpha and beta responses | 17 (good) | |
| Herrmann, 2010, Germany ( | Eriksen flanker task while recording the neural activity with 26 scalp EEG electrodes | Mean age of 33 years. Patients discontinued all medication 3 days prior. Age was included as a control variable. ADHD patients were excluded if they had a current Axis I mood, substance-related, psychotic, or anxiety disorder and/or a concurrent Axis II disorder according to DSM-IV. Or had a history of dependence on illegal drugs or alcohol, as well as any current psychotropic medication | Reduced Pe amplitudes, but also reduced ERN values, in ADHD patients. Importantly, these differences as well as the deficits in behavioral performance were mainly detectable in the younger subsample, but not in the elderly subsample | 19 (excellent) | |
| Kitsune, 2015, UK ( | Resting-state EEG power or GFS between recordings made at the beginning and end of testing session. Within and between group comparison. 62 channel DC-coupled recording system. 1.5-h cognitive test battery. 2-min eyes open recording performed before and after | ADHD mean age, 18.70 years. Excluded if, IQ < 70, reported autism, epilepsy, learning difficulties, brain disorders and any genetic or medical disorder associated with externalizing behaviors that might mimic ADHD | The ADHD group had higher delta and theta power at time-1, but not at time-2, whereas beta power was elevated only at time-2. Significant IQ effects | 15 (good) | |
| Koehler, 2009, Germany ( | Two EEG readings over 5-min intervals during eyes-closed resting period. 21 electrodes placed according to the international 10–20 system. Within and between group comparisons | 34 patients between 18 and 55 years of age, mean age 33.26 years. 1:1 ratio male-female | The ADHD patients showed a significant increase of absolute power density in alpha and theta bands. No differences were found for beta activity | 18 (excellent) | |
| Leroy, 2018, Belgium ( | ERP study. Oddball paradigm using implicit navigational images and analyzed EEG dynamics with swLORETA inverse modeling of the evoked potential generators to study cortical processing. | Mean age was 38 years. | Visual attention task produced decrease in neural networks. Differentiation of delta-theta in executive function, specifically in visual tasks. Overall, findings suggest early cortical stages of visual processing are compromised for adult ADHD | 16 (good) | |
| Liechti, 2013, Switzerland ( | Resting EEG during separate 3-min eyes open and eyes closed conditions, followed by cognitive ERP tests including cued continuous performance tests. 10–20 system 48-channel EEG. Within and Between group comparisons | Adult ADHD group age range 32–55. | No consistent theta or theta/beta increases were found in ADHD. Even multivariate analyses indicated only marginal EEG power increases in children with ADHD. Instead, consistent developmental theta decreases were observed, indicating that maturational lags of fewer than 3 years would have been detected in children. | 18 (excellent) | |
| Loo, 2013, US ( | Resting EEG, 5-min eyes closed and eyes open conditions. ADHD versus control and between age group analysis. 40 Ag/AgCl surface electrodes in an extended international 10/20 location system. | Excluded if current comorbid psychiatric disorders, IQ<80. Adult age range 32–64 years. | Theta-Beta ratio did not differ significantly by ADHD status for youth but was significantly lower in adults with ADHD compared with controls. ADHD subtype and psychiatric comorbidities such as disruptive behavior disorders and depression have opposing and significant mediating effects on the TBR. | 17 (good) | |
| Markovska-Simoska, 2017, Macedonia ( | EEG was recorded during an eyes-open condition. Spectral analysis of absolute and relative power. Electrode cap with 19 electrodes using the 10–20 system | ADHD adults mean age 35. 8 years. Comorbid diagnoses were excluded from the analysis. | ADHD children showed increased absolute power of slow waves (theta and delta), whereas adults exhibited no differences compared with normal subjects. Relative power spectra showed no differences between the ADHD and control groups. Only ADHD children showed greater TBR compared to the normal group. Classification analysis showed that ADHD children could be differentiated from the control group by the absolute theta values and theta/beta ratio at Cz, but this was not the case with ADHD adults | 16 (good) | |
| Marquardt, 2018, Norway ( | ERP study. Participants performed modified version of the Eriksen flanker task. EEG recorded using a 64-channel equidistant electrode cap with Ag/AgCl electrodes. The recording reference was placed at Cz, with a ground placed at approximately AFz | ADHD group mean age 35.4 years. All ADHD participants had a formal diagnosis according to national standards. Groups did not differ regarding IQ, sex, age, or handedness. Comorbidities were not excluded in either the ADHD or control group; anxiety /depression ( | Behavioral measures did not differ between groups. However results from P3, ERN, and Pe suggest persistent alterations of attentional and error-monitoring processes for ADHD adults. | 19 (excellent) | |
| Missonnier, 2013, Switzerland ( | Continuous EEG recorded using 20 surface electrodes. Locations, according to the 10–20 international system. Each group performed two tasks. Between group analysis | Excluded neurologic conditions. ADHD mean age 34.3 years, age range 26–40 | ADHD patients displayed lower alpha event-related de-synchronization compared to controls | 19 (excellent) | |
| Poil, 2014, Switzerland ( | 2.5-min resting state recording with eyes closed position. 60 electrodes on scalp. Using 10–20 system, plus a number of 10-10 positions | The subject groups were matched for handedness, gender, and estimated IQ. The control subjects did not report any current or previous neurological or psychiatric diagnoses | Adult ADHD demonstrated slowing of alpha frequency, combined with a higher power in alpha and beta. | 17 (good) | |
| Ponomarev, 2014, Russia ( | Resting EEG, CSD and gIC analysis (19 channels, linked ears reference, eyes open/closed). Between group comparison | Excluded complex perinatal period, head injury with cerebral symptoms, history of neurological or psychiatric diseases, convulsions, nonnormal mental and physical development, below average or better grades in school, current medication or drugs. | Pattern of differences in gIC and CSD spectral power between conditions was approximately similar, whereas it was more widely spatially distributed for EEG. Size effect of differences in gIC and CSD spectral power between groups of subjects was considerably greater than in the case of EEG. Significant reduction of gIC and CSD spectral power depending on conditions was found in ADHD. Reducing power in a wide frequency range in the fronto-central areas is a common phenomenon regardless of whether the eyes were open or closed. Spectral power of local EEG activity isolated by gICA/CSD may provide a discriminating biomarker | 18 (excellent) | |
| Strauß, 2018, Germany ( | Cross-sectional study. Assessed brain arousal regulation using the VIGALL 2.1 to analyze 15-min resting EEG data. Cap mounted, using 31 electrodes and the 10–20 system. Eyes closed position | Mean age 30.5. Exclusion criteria: organic mental disorders, current (moderate/severe) depressive episode or subthreshold depression, acute suicidality, current manic episode, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or psychosis; current somatic disease, use of psychotropic medication, EEGs containing more than 15% artifacts or 95% low voltage segments | Adult ADHD patients showed significantly lower arousal levels and significantly less stable brain | 18 (excellent) | |
| Tombor, 2018, Hungary ( | Spontaneous EEG was recorded | Subjects were individually matched by age, gender | ADHD showed lower task-free gamma band activity compared to controls. Manifest in the right hemispheric and midlne centroparietal areas. Lower right central and centroparietal activity (30.25–39Hz), was associated with ADHD severity. Inverse association found between right centroparietal (39.25-48Hz) activity and ADHD severity. | 18 (excellent) | |
| Woltering, 2012, Canada ( | Resting-state EEG with eyes-open and eyes-closed conditions, were compared for college students with ADHD and nonclinical control. 129 channel EEG net. Between group analysis | Excluded those with uncorrected sensory impairment, major neurological dysfunction and psychosis, and current use of sedating or mood altering medication other than stimulants prescribed for ADHD. Mean age of 25.8 years | ADHD group showed decreased power for fast frequencies, especially alpha. Also increased power in the slow frequency bands, however, these effects were strongest using relative power computations. Furthermore, the TBR measure was reliably higher for the ADHD group. All effects were more pronounced for the eyes-closed compared to the eyes-open condition. Measures of intra-individual variability suggested that brains of the ADHD group were less variable than those of controls | 15 (good) |
*Employed data set from Hale et al. (26).