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Adult ADHD
significantly increases risk of common form
of dementia
January 20, 2011--Adults who suffer from
attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) are more than three times as likely
to develop a common form of degenerative
dementia than those without, according to
research in the January issue of the European
Journal of Neurology.
Researchers from Argentina confirmed the
link during a study of 360 patients with
degenerative dementia and 149 healthy
controls, matched by age, sex and education.
The dementia patients comprised 109 people
with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and 251
with Alzheimer's.
"Our study showed that 48 per cent of
patients with DLB – the second most common
cause of degenerative dementia in the
elderly after Alzheimer's – had previously
suffered from adult ADHD" says lead author
Dr Angel Golimstok.
"This was more than three times the 15 per
cent rate found in both the control group
and the group with Alzheimer's.
"DLB is thought to account for around ten
per cent of dementia cases in older people,
but it tends to be under-diagnosed because
it shares some characteristics with both
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
"It is a degenerative neurological condition
that has a progressive and disabling effect
on a person's mental and physical skills.
Other symptoms can include recurrent and
realistic visual hallucinations,
fluctuations in the person's everyday
abilities and spontaneous movement problems
similar to those observed in Parkinson's.
"ADHD is one of the most common behaviour
disorders in child and adolescent psychiatry
and the problems it causes, such as
difficulty paying attention, hyperactivity
and doing things impulsively, can continue
into adulthood.
"It is believed that the same
neurotransmitter pathway problems are
involved in the development of both
conditions, so our research set out to test
the theory that adult ADHD often precedes
DLB."
The average age of the study subjects was 75
in the DLB group and 74 in the Alzheimer's
and control groups. Approximately two-third
of the participants were female and length
of education was very similar. None of the
patients were taking psychostimulant drugs.
Patient selection was restricted to people
with mild to moderate dementia, measuring 14
to 26 on the mini mental status examination
scale and one to two on the clinical
dementia rating scale.
In the healthy controls, previous ADHD
symptoms were assessed using information
from the subjects and direct informants. In
patients with cognitive impairment, the
assessment was based on symptoms described
by direct informants who had known the
patient for at least 10 years and had
information obtained from a close relative
who knew the patient in childhood.
Two neurologists, who were unaware of the
objectives of the study, were independently
asked to assess all the patients for adult
ADHD using:
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV),
which has been produced by the American
Psychiatric Association to diagnose
psychiatric disorders
the validated Wender Utah Rating Scale,
which is specially designed to
retrospectively assess ADHD.
This produced agreement levels of 98 per
cent in the DLB group, 96 per cent in the
Alzheimer's group and 97.5 per cent in the
control group.
A third neurologist provided their judgement
in the small number of cases where the first
two disagreed and a diagnosis of ADHD was
recorded if two out of the three
neurologists agreed. The results were then
checked by a fourth neurologist fully
informed about the objectives of the study.
These results provided an overall diagnosis
of previous adult ADHD for the two dementia
groups and the control. They also showed
that impulsivity and hyperactivity, which
are major symptoms of ADHD, were
significantly higher in the DLB group than
the Alzheimer's group and the control group
(measuring 14.7, 5.9 and 6.4 respectively on
the Wender Utah Rating Scale).
"We believe that our study is the first of
its kind to examine the clinical association
between adult ADHD symptoms and DLB and that
it has established a clear link between the
two conditions" says Dr Golimstok.
"Our theory is that this association can be
explained by the common neurotransmitter
dysfunction present in both conditions.
There is clearly a common process involved
in both illnesses and it appears that ADHD
often develops into DLB as the patient
ages."