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Research Papers

Cognitive and neurophysiological markers of ADHD persistence and remission

Cheung, Celeste H. M., Rijsdijk, Fruhling, McLoughlin, Gráinne, Brandeis, Daniel, Banaschewski, Tobias, Asherson, Philip, Kuntsi, Jonna (2016) · The British Journal of Psychiatry: The Journal of Mental Science

BACKGROUND: Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) persists in around two-thirds of individuals in adolescence and early adulthood. AIMS: To examine the cognitive and neurophysiological processes underlying the persistence or remission of ADHD. METHOD: Follow-up data were obtained from 110 young people with childhood ADHD and 169 controls on cognitive, electroencephalogram frequency, event-related potential (ERP) and actigraph movement measures after 6 years. RESULTS: ADHD persisters differed from remitters on preparation-vigilance measures (contingent negative variation, delta activity, reaction time variability and omission errors), IQ and actigraph count, but not on executive control measures of inhibition or working memory (nogo-P3 amplitudes, commission errors and digit span backwards). CONCLUSIONS: Preparation-vigilance measures were markers of remission, improving concurrently with ADHD symptoms, whereas executive control measures were not sensitive to ADHD persistence/remission. For IQ, the present and previous results combined suggest a role in moderating ADHD outcome. These findings fit with previously identified aetiological separation of the cognitive impairments in ADHD. The strongest candidates for the development of non-pharmacological interventions involving cognitive training and neurofeedback are the preparation-vigilance processes that were markers of ADHD remission.

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