Adrenomedullary Function During Cognitive Testing in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder - 05/09/11
, MARCIA A. DOVER, M.D., BENSON P. YANG, M.S., JOHN M. HOLAHAN, PH.D., SALLY E. SHAYWITZ, M.D., KAREN E. MARCHIONE, M.A., LAURA M. HALL, M.S., JACK M. FLETCHER, PH.D., BENNETT A. SHAYWITZ, M.D.ABSTRACT |
Objective |
Reported correlations between epinephrine (EPI) excretion and classroom performance, the cognition-enhancing effects of EPI infusion, increased EPI excretion with stimulants, and reports of decreased EPI excretion in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) suggest that sympathoadrenomedullary function might be altered in ADHD. This hypothesis was tested by examining sympathetic and adrenomedullary functioning during cognitive testing in boys with diagnosed ADHD.
Method |
Urinary excretion of EPI and norepinephrine during a 3-hour cognitive test battery was assessed in 7- to 13-year-old boys. Excretion rates (nanograms per hour per square meter of body surface area) were determined in 200 individuals with ADHD (diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria), with or without co-occurring oppositional defiant/conduct disorder or learning disorder. A non-ADHD contrast group (n = 51) with similar comorbidity was also studied.
Results |
Substantially lower (mean ± SE) urinary EPI excretion was observed in the ADHD-inattentive subtype (n = 71) compared with the control group (200 ± 22 versus 278 ± 24 ng/hr/m2; F = 5.99, p = .015, critical ⍺ = .017). No diagnostic group differences were seen for norepinephrine excretion. Correlational analysis of both parent- and teacher-rated behaviors revealed that inattention factors consistently negatively predicted urinary EPI excretion.
Conclusions |
The data extend findings of lower adrenome-dullary activity during cognitive challenge in individuals with ADHD and suggest that the alteration is associated with inattentive behavior.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key Words : epinephrine, inattention, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Plan
| The research was supported by NIH grants MH30929, PO1 HD21888, and PO50 HD25802. |
Vol 39 - N° 5
P. 635-643 - mai 2000 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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