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July 31, 2025

“Do I Have ADHD?”: Diagnosis of ADHD in Adulthood and Its Mimics in the Neurology Clinic

A recent in-depth clinical review published by the American Academy of Neurology examines how ADHD manifests in adulthood and how neurologists can differentiate it from other causes of attention problems. 

Recognition of ADHD in adults by clinicians is often delayed or misdiagnosed due to overlapping symptoms with anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, and life stressors. Conversely, as ADHD in adults becomes more widely acknowledged, largely due to increased public awareness and social media trends, clinicians need to take extra care not to incorrectly diagnose patients with ADHD. This publication aims to shine a light on both sides of this issue and highlight the importance of clinicians being trained in proper ADHD screening. 

ADHD Symptom Overlaps and Differential Diagnosis 

The article highlights how many adults come to neurology clinics convinced they have ADHD after online quizzes or watching others get diagnosed. True ADHD must be differentiated from issues with shared signs and symptoms such as poor sleep, anxiety, depression, or even OCD or Bipolar Disorder. This is a high-level clinical skill called differential diagnosis.

  • Sleep Issues- This is one of the most common causes of attention and focus problems that resemble ADHD in adults. Chronic sleep deprivation can lead to issues like distractibility, forgetfulness, and emotional instability, which may be mistaken for ADHD symptoms, especially if people don’t realize how long-term sleep loss has affected them. Clinicians are encouraged to ask about sleep habits and use tools like the Epworth Sleepiness Scale.

  • Anxiety Disorders- Anxiety is common in adults with ADHD, but a patient with anxiety who does not have ADHD may present with signs and symptoms that overlap with ADHD. A key difference between anxiety and ADHD is that people with ADHD often get distracted even when relaxed or doing something enjoyable without realizing it. Those with anxiety usually feel tense, guilty, and very aware of their distraction.

  • Depression- Depression can cause trouble with focus, energy, and motivation, again, often overlapping with or mimicking symptoms of ADHD. Since both conditions are common, they can also occur together, making it important to look at when symptoms started. If attention problems were present before any depressive episodes, it may point to ADHD, but in unclear cases, treating depression first and then reassessing can help clarify the diagnosis.

  • OCD- Some people with ADHD experience distressing, repetitive thoughts that feel like OCD, even if they haven’t been diagnosed with it. These thoughts can cause anxiety or sadness, even when the person knows they’re unlikely or irrational, but unlike OCD, there are no compulsive behaviors. In some cases, ADHD medication helps reduce these thoughts by improving focus and emotional regulation.

  • Autism- Adults with ASD are more likely to also have ADHD, and in some cases, ADHD symptoms, such as missing social cues or acting impulsively, can be mistaken for autism. This overlap can sometimes make diagnosis more complicated.

The author of the article, Dr. Mierau, provides detailed clinical strategies such as asking open-ended questions, exploring how symptoms show up at home and at work, and watching for patterns like chronic lateness or emotional overeating. (This paper points out that, while not included in the DSM-VI, food cravings and binge behaviors are commonly found in patients with ADHD.)

This review correctly emphasizes that neuropsychological testing is not necessary for diagnosis. Instead, a thorough clinical interview, including a detailed family history and behavioral observation, can be more telling. 

Conclusion: Real Barriers to Proper ADHD Diagnosis

The review article closes with a call to action: the biggest obstacle isn’t diagnosing or treating ADHD, it’s access. Adults struggle with pharmacy shortages, no-refill laws, and insurance hurdles, despite research showing treatment reduces mortality and improves life quality. Dr. Mierau argues for more trained providers, better public education, and policy changes to reduce stigma and expand access.

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Sleep and ADHD?

Sleep and ADHD?

Sleep disorders are one of the most commonly self-reported comorbidities of adults with ADHD, affecting 50 to 70 percent of them. A team of British researchers set out to see whether this association could be further confirmed with objective sleep measures, using cognitive function tests and electroencephalography (EEG).

Measured as theta/beta ratio, EEG slowing is a widely used indicator in ADHD research. While it occurs normally in non-ADHD adults at the conclusion of a day, during the day it signals excessive sleepiness, whether from obstructive sleep apnea or from neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders. Coffee reverses EEG slowing, as do ADHD stimulant medications.

Study participants were either on stable treatment with ADHD medication (stimulant or non-stimulant medication), or on no medication. Participants had to refrain from taking any stimulant medications for at least 48 hours prior to taking the tests. Persons with IQ below 80 or with recurrent depression or undergoing a depressive episode were excluded.

The team administered a cognitive function test, The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART). Observers rated on-task sleepiness using videos from the cognitive testing sessions. They wired participants for EEG monitoring.

Observer-rated sleepiness was found to be moderately higher in the ADHD group than in controls. Although sleep quality was slightly lower in the sleepy group than in the ADHD group, and symptom severity slightly greater in the ADHD group than the sleepy group, neither difference was statistically significant, indicating extensive overlap.

Omission errors in the SART were strongly correlated with sleepiness level, and the strength of this correlation was independent of ADHD symptom severity. EEG slowing in all regions of the brain was more than 50 percent higher in the ADHD group than in the control group and was highest in the frontal cortex.

Treating the sleepy group as a third group, EEG slowing was highest for the ADHD group, followed closely by the sleepy group, and more distantly by the neurotypical group. The gaps between the ADHD and sleepy groups on the one hand, and the neurotypical group on the other, were both large and statistically significant, whereas the gap between the ADHD and sleepy groups was not. EEG slowing was both a significant predictor of ADHD and of ADHD symptom severity.

The authors concluded, These findings indicate that the cognitive performance deficits routinely attributed to ADHD  are largely due to on-task sleepiness and not exclusively due to ADHD symptom severity. We would like to propose a simple working hypothesis that daytime sleepiness plays a major role in cognitive functioning of adults with ADHD. As adults with ADHD are more severely sleep deprived compared to neurotypical control subjects and are more vulnerable to sleep deprivation, in various neurocognitive tasks they should manifest larger sleepiness-related reductions in cognitive performance. One clear testable prediction of the working hypothesis would be that carefully controlling for sleepiness, time of day and/or individual circadian rhythms, would result in substantial reduction in the neurocognitive deficits in replications of classic ADHD studies.

November 1, 2023
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ADHD in College Students

ADHD in College Students

ADHD continues to be a significant and difficult challenge in the collegiate world. The symptoms of the disorder directly impact a person's ability to manage the demands of college. Matriculating students are expected to rapidly obtain and deploy many self-management skills. Increased academic expectations demand a greater capacity for sustained attention. And the evolving social milieu can tax the emotional regulation and social cognition of those with ADHD.

Having seen our patients struggle, the Association for Collegiate Psychiatry decided to submit a workshop for presentation at the 2019 APA meeting in San Francisco. While developing the presentation we discovered a wealth of recent young adult follow-up data from longitudinal studies.1 Without exception, the study's findings reflected a significant decrease in functional outcomes across multiple domains of adult life. Further, we discovered that the new work coming from the TRAC observational study of college students has found troublesome rates of psychiatric comorbidity after the first year.

This epidemiologic evidence supports devoting resources to the care of this cohort. But it appears that this has not penetrated the world of campus mental health treatment. At present, most post-secondary schools (to our knowledge, data is quite limited) lean toward policies that make it difficult for students with ADHD to be diagnosed or treated on campus. One obstacle is requiring evidence of a childhood diagnosis, which many children with high-IQ compensated ADHD may not have received. Another can be the demand for expensive and comprehensive neuropsychological testing even though the diagnostic value of that testing remains unclear.3 Some student health centers ask students to obtain prescriptions from the treaters they saw prior to coming to campus, even if those prescribers are out of state. Though these policies may be deployed in an effort to decrease the diversion of stimulant medication, such hurdles may be difficult for the 18-year-old ADHD student to navigate. The result is that many students with this predictably destructive condition go untreated.

The good news is this subject interests the collegiate community. Among other things, our APA workshop was selected to be the APA's Member's Course of the Month for January 2020.

Much work remains in developing and deploying diagnostic policies and treatment strategies that colleges and universities feel comfortable supporting. We mentioned the APSARD community during the workshop as a resource for professionals interested in ADHD. And we hope the wider ADHD research and treatment communities will join us in focusing our energy on this underserved and sometimes maligned group of students who need our help.

February 10, 2021
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Liquid Medication Options for ADHD Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Long-Acting Liquid Methylphenidate for Treating ADHD in Intellectually Capable Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder

A team from Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital conducted a six-week open-label trial of liquid-formulation extended-release methylphenidate (MPH-ER) to treat ADHD in adults with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (HF-ASD). ASD is a lifelong disorder with deficits in social communication and interaction and restricted, repetitive behaviors. Roughly half of those diagnosed with ASD also are diagnosed with ADHD.

This was the first stimulant trial in adults with both ASD and ADHD. There were twelve male and three female participants, all with moderate to severe ADHD, and in their twenties, with IQ scores of at least 85.

Use of a liquid formulation enabled doses to be raised very gradually, starting with a daily dose of 5mg (1mL) and titrating up to 60mg over the first three weeks, then maintaining that level through the sixth week.  Participants were reevaluated for ADHD symptoms every week during the six-week trial. Severity of ASD was assessed at the start, midpoint, and conclusion of the trial, as were other psychiatric symptoms.

Prior to the trial, researchers agreed on a combination of targets on two clinician-rated scoring systems that would have to be reached for treatment to be considered successful. One is a score of 2 or less on the CGI-S, a measure of illness severity, with scores ranging from 1 (normal, not at all ill) to 7 (most extremely ill). The other, a reduction of at least 30 percent in the AISRS score, which combines each of 18 symptoms of ADHD on a severity grid (0=not present; 3=severe; overall minimum score: 0; overall maximum score: 54).

At the conclusion of the trial, twelve of the fifteen patients (80 percent) met the preset conditions for success. Fully fourteen (93 percent) saw a ≥ 30 percent reduction in their AISRS score, while twelve scored ≤ 2 on illness severity.

However, when using the patient-rated ASRS scoring system, only five (33 percent) saw a ≥ 30 percent reduction in ADHD severity.

Thirteen participants (87 percent) reported at least one adverse event, and nine (60 percent) reported two or more. One reported a serious adverse event (attempted suicide) in a patient with multiple prior attempts.  Because the attempt was not deemed due to medication they continued in and completed the trial. Seven participants experienced titration-limiting adverse events (headaches, palpitations, jaw pain, and insomnia). Headache was most frequent (53%), followed by insomnia and anxiety (33% each), and decreased appetite (27%).

During the trial, weight significantly decreased, while pulse significantly increased. There were no significant differences in other vital and cardiovascular measurements.

The authors concluded, “this OLT of short-term MPH-ER therapy documents that acute treatment with MPH-ER in young adults with ASD was associated with significant improvement in ADHD symptoms, mirroring the typically-expected magnitude of response observed in adults with only ADHD. Treatment with MPH-ER was well-tolerated, though associated with a higher than expected frequency of adverse events.”

They also cautioned, “The results of this study need to be considered in light of some methodological limitations. This was an open-label study; therefore, assessments were not blind to treatment. We did not employ a placebo control group and, therefore, cannot separate the effects of treatment from time or placebo effects. … firmer conclusions regarding the safety and efficacy of MPH-ER for the treatment of ADHD in HF-ASD populations await results from larger, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials.”

February 8, 2021
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How to Identify ADHD in Adults With Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

How to identify ADHD in adults with alcohol use disorder (AUD)

ADHD is far more prevalent among persons with AUD (roughly 20 percent) than it is in the general population. The most accurate way of identifying ADHD is through structured clinical interviews. Given that this is not feasible in routine clinical settings, ADHD self-report scales offer a less reliable but much less resource-intensive alternative. Could the latter be calibrated in a way that would yield diagnoses that better correspond with the former?

A German team compared the outcomes of both methods on 404 adults undergoing residential treatment for AUD. All were abstinent while undergoing evaluations. First, to obtain reliable ADHD diagnoses, each underwent the Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults, DIVA. If DIVA indicated probable ADHD, two expert clinicians conducted successive follow-up interviews. ADHD was only diagnosed when both experts concurred with the DIVA outcome.

Participants were then asked to use two adult ADHD self-report scales, the six-item Adult ADHD Self Report Scale v1.1 (ASRS) and the 30-item Conners’ Adult ADHD Rating Scale (CAARS-S-SR). The outcomes were then compared with the expert interview diagnoses.

Using established cut-off values for the ASRS, less than two-thirds of patients known to have ADHD were scored as having ADHD by the test. In other words, there was a very high rate of false negatives. Lowering the cut-off to a sum score ≥ 11 resulted in a correct diagnosis of more than seven out of eight. But the rate of false positives soared to almost two in five.  Similarly, the CAARS-S-SR had its greatest sensitivity (ability to accurately identify those with ADHD) at the lowest threshold of ≥ 60, but at a similarly high cost in false positives (more than a third).

The authors found it was impossible to come anywhere near the precision of the expert clinical interviews. Nevertheless, they judged the best compromise to be to use the lowest thresholds on both tests and then require positive determinations from both. That led to successfully diagnosing more than three out of four individuals known to have ADHD, with a false positive rate of just over one in five.

Using this combination of the two self-reporting questionnaires with lower thresholds, they suggest, could substantially reduce the under-diagnosis of ADHD in alcohol-dependent patients.

February 6, 2021
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New Insights Into The Brains of People Living with ADHD and ADHD Symptoms

New insights into the brains of people living with ADHD and those with ADHD symptoms.

The ENIGMA-ADHD Working Group published their second large study on the brains of people with ADHD in the American Journal of Psychiatry this month. In this second study, the focus was on the cerebral cortex, which is the outer layer of the brain.

ADHD symptoms include inattention and/or hyperactivity and acting impulsively. The disorder affects more than one in 20 (5.3%) children, and two-thirds of those diagnosed continue to experience symptoms as adults.

In this study, researchers found subtle differences in the brain’s outer layer - the cortex - when they combined brain imaging data on almost 4,000 participants from 37 research groups worldwide. The differences were only significant for children and did not hold for adolescents or adults. The childhood effects were most prominent and widespread for the surface area of the cortex. More focal changes were found in the thickness of the cortex. All differences were subtle and detected only at a group level, and thus these brain images cannot be used to diagnose ADHD or guide its treatment.

These subtle differences in the brain’s cortex were not limited to people with the clinical diagnosis of ADHD: they were also present - in a less marked form - in youth with some ADHD symptoms. This second finding results from a collaboration between the ENIGMA-ADHD Working Group and the Generation-R study from Rotterdam, which has brain images on 2700 children aged 9-11 years from the general population. The researchers found more symptoms of inattention to be associated with a decrease in cortical surface area. Furthermore, siblings of those with ADHD showed changes to their cortical surface area that resembled their affected sibling. This suggests that familial factors such as genetics or shared environment may play a role in brain cortical characteristics.

This is the largest study to date to look at the cortex of people with ADHD. It included 2246 people with a diagnosis of ADHD and 1713 people without, aged between four and 63 years old. This is the second study published by the ENIGMA-ADHD Working Group; the first examined structures that are deep in the brain. The ADHD Working Group is one of over 50 working groups of the ENIGMA Consortium, in which international researchers pull together to understand the brain alterations associated with different disorders and the role of genetic and environmental factors in those alterations.

The authors say the findings could help improve understanding of the disorder. ‘We identify cortical differences that are consistently associated with ADHD by combining data from many different research groups internationally. We find that the differences extend beyond narrowly-defined clinical diagnoses and are seen, in a less marked manner, in those with some ADHD symptoms and in unaffected siblings of people with ADHD. This finding supports the idea that the symptoms underlying ADHD may be a continuous trait in the population, which has already been reported by other behavioral and genetic studies.’. In the future, the ADHD Working Group hopes to look at additional key features in the brain- such as the structural connections between brain areas – and to increase the representation of adults affected by ADHD, in whom limited research has been performed to date. 

See: https://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ajp.2019.18091033

February 4, 2021
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Is Pharmacotherapy Effective for ADHD Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder?

How effective is pharmacotherapy of ADHD in adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder?

The team of researchers found that pharmacological treatment of adults with diagnoses of ADHD and ASD seem to be just as successful as the pharmacological treatment of adults with only ADHD.

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is frequently comorbid with ADHD. Among adults with ADHD, as many as half are reported to also have ASD.

A Dutch team set out to answer two questions:

  • Do adults with ADHD and comorbid ASD experience less effectiveness of pharmacological treatment for ADHD than adults with only ADHD?
  • Do adults with ADHD and comorbid ASD experience different or more severe side effects of pharmacological treatment for ADHD than adults with only ADHD, as measured in side-effect scores, blood pressure, heart rate, and weight?

This was a retrospective study, using well-documented medical records, of the effects of drug treatment with methylphenidate (MPH), dexamphetamine (DEX), atomoxetine (ATX), bupropion, or modafinil.

The researchers compared 60 adults with comorbid ASD and ADHD to 226 adults with only ADHD. ADHD symptoms were scored using the Conner's ADHD Rating Scale: Self Report-Short Version (CAARS: S-S). Side effects of ADHD medication were measured using either a 13-item or 20-item checklist with 4-point scales for item response. Researchers also tracked changes in body weight, blood pressure, and heart rate.

Following treatment, ADHD symptoms among the comorbid group declined by a quarter, and among the ADHD-only group by almost a third. There was no significant difference between men and women. Controlling for age, gender, and ADHD subtype, a comorbid diagnosis of ASD also did not significantly affect ADHD symptom reduction.

Turning to side effects, in the ADHD+ASD group, there were significant increases in decreased appetite and weight loss, and decreases in agitation, anxiety, and sadness/unhappiness. In the ADHD-only group, there were significant increases in decreased appetite, weight loss, and dry mouth, and decreases in sleeping disorder, nervousness, agitation, anxiety, and sadness/unhappiness. Yet there were no significant differences between the two groups. Side effects increased and decreased similarly in both. Likewise, there were no significant differences between the groups in changes in heart rate and blood pressure. The only significant difference in medication dosage was for bupropion, which was higher in the ADHD+ASD group, though without any sign of difference in side effects.

The authors concluded that this retrospective study showed pharmacological treatment of adults with diagnoses of ADHD and ASD to be just as successful as the pharmacological treatment of adults with only ADHD, but cautioned that a randomized controlled trial should be conducted to evaluate the effectiveness and possible side effects of pharmacological treatment for ADHD in patients with ASD more reliably.

February 2, 2021
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ADHD May Be Underdiagnosed Based on Sociodemographics

ADHD is underdiagnosed, to varying degrees, among adults of different ethnicities, ages, and education levels in the U.S.

ADHD is underdiagnosed and most cases of ADHD in adults are not being diagnosed by clinicians.

A cohort study looked at over five million adults and over 850,000 children between the ages of five and eleven who received care at Kaiser Permanente Northern California during the ten-year period from the beginning of 2007 through the end of 2016. At any given time, KPNC serves roughly four million persons. It is representative of the population of the region, except for the highest and lowest income strata.

ADHD Diagnosis Rates:

  • Adults: Diagnosis rates rose from 0.43% in 2007 to 0.96% in 2016.
  • Children: Diagnosis rates went up from 2.96% to 3.74%, nearly four times higher than in adults.

Diagnosis Rates by Ethnicity:

  • Non-Hispanic whites had the highest adult diagnosis rates, increasing from 0.67% to 1.42%.
  • American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN): Rates grew from 0.56% to 1.14%.
  • Black and Hispanic adults had similar rates: Black adults increased from 0.22% to 0.69%, and Hispanic adults rose from 0.25% to 0.65%.
  • Asian adults had the lowest rates (0.11% to 0.35%), followed by Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders (0.11% to 0.39%).

ADHD Diagnosis and Age:

The likelihood of being diagnosed with ADHD dropped sharply with age.

(When compared to 18-24-year-olds):

  • 25-34-year-olds were 16% less likely.
  • 35-44-year-olds were 33% less likely.
  • 45-54-year-olds were less than half as likely.
  • 55-64-year-olds were less than a quarter as likely.
  • Adults over 65 were about 5% as likely.

This matches findings from other studies showing that ADHD diagnoses become less common with age.

Other Factors:

  • Adults with higher education levels were twice as likely to be diagnosed as those with less education.
  • Household income had little effect on diagnosis rates.
  • Women were slightly less likely to be diagnosed than men.

ADHD and Comorbidity:

Adults with ADHD were more likely to have other mental health conditions:

  • Eating disorders: 5 times more likely.
  • Bipolar disorder or depression: Over 4 times more likely.
  • Anxiety: More than twice as likely.
  • Substance abuse: Slightly more likely.

Key Findings:
  1. Rising ADHD Diagnosis Rates: The increase in diagnoses may be due to better recognition of ADHD by doctors and greater public awareness during the study period.
  2. Differences by Ethnicity: The differences in diagnosis rates by ethnicity could be related to access to healthcare, cultural attitudes toward mental health, or even attempts to obtain ADHD medications for non-medical reasons, which may be more common among white patients.
Conclusion:

The authors speculate that rising rates of diagnosis “could reflect increasing recognition of ADHD in adults by physicians and other clinicians as well as growing public awareness of ADHD during the decade under study.” Turning to the notable differences by ethnicity, they note, “Racial/ethnic differences could also reflect differential rates of treatment-seeking or access to care. … Racial/ethnic background is known to play an important role in opinions on mental health services, health care utilization, and physician preferences. In addition, rates of diagnosis- seeking to obtain stimulant medication for non-medical use may be more common among white vs nonwhite patients.” They conclude, “greater consideration must be placed on cultural influences on health care seeking and delivery, along with an increased understanding of the various social, psychological, and biological differences among races/ethnicities as well as culturally sensitive approaches to identify and treat ADHD in the total population.”

The study highlights that many cases of adult ADHD go undiagnosed. Research shows about 3% of adults worldwide have ADHD, but this study found that less than 1% are diagnosed by doctors. This points to the need for better training for clinicians to recognize, diagnose, and treat ADHD in adults. It also emphasizes the importance of understanding cultural factors that affect how people seek and receive care.

April 12, 2022
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Daytime Sleepiness, Cognitive Function, and Adult ADHD

What's the relationship between daytime sleepiness and cognitive functioning in adults with ADHD?

Sleep disorders are one of the most commonly self-reported comorbidities of adults with ADHD, affecting 50 to 70 percent of them. A team of British researchers set out to see whether this association could be further confirmed with objective sleep measures, using cognitive function tests and electroencephalography (EEG).

Measured as theta/beta ratio, EEG slowing is a widely used indicator in ADHD research. While it occurs normally in non-ADHD adults at the conclusion of a day, during the day it signals excessive sleepiness, whether from obstructive sleep apnea or neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders. Coffee reverses EEG slowing, as do ADHD stimulant medications.

Study participants were either on stable treatment with ADHD medication (stimulant or non-stimulant medication) or on no medication. Participants had to refrain from taking any stimulant medications for at least 48 hours prior to taking the tests. Persons with IQ below 80 or with recurrent depression or undergoing a depressive episode were excluded.

The team administered a cognitive function test, The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART). Observers rated on-task sleepiness using videos from the cognitive testing sessions. They wired participants for EEG monitoring.

Observer-rated sleepiness was found to be moderately higher in the ADHD group than in controls. Although sleep quality was slightly lower in the sleepy group than in the ADHD group, and symptom severity slightly greater in the ADHD group than the sleepy group, neither difference was statistically significant, indicating extensive overlap.

Omission errors in the SART were strongly correlated with sleepiness level, and the strength of this correlation was independent of ADHD symptom severity. EEG slowing in all regions of the brain was more than 50 percent higher in the ADHD group than in the control group and was highest in the frontal cortex.

Treating the sleepy group as a third group, EEG slowing was highest for the ADHD group, followed closely by the sleepy group, and more distantly by the neurotypical group. The gaps between the ADHD and sleepy groups on the one hand, and the neurotypical group on the other, were both large and statistically significant, whereas the gap between the ADHD and sleepy groups was not. EEG slowing was both a significant predictor of ADHD and of ADHD symptom severity.

The authors concluded, These findings indicate that the cognitive performance deficits routinely attributed to ADHD are largely due to on-task sleepiness and not exclusively due to ADHD symptom severity.  we would like to propose a simple working hypothesis that daytime sleepiness plays a major role in cognitive functioning of adults with ADHD. As adults with ADHD are more severely sleep deprived compared to neurotypical control subjects and are more vulnerable to sleep deprivation, in various neurocognitive tasks they should manifest larger sleepiness-related reductions in cognitive performance. One clear testable prediction of the working hypothesis would be that carefully controlling for sleepiness, time of day, and/or individual circadian rhythms would result in a substantial reduction in the neurocognitive deficits in replications of classic ADHD studies.

January 31, 2021
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