ADHD Flashcards

1
Q

Name the 3 core symptoms of ADHD

A

Inattention
Impulsivity
Hyperactivity

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2
Q

What are the prevalence rates of ADHD in 1) children and 2) adults

A

1) children: 3-7 %

2) adults: 4-5 %

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3
Q

Name three factors of the etiology of ADHD

A

1) significant heredity factor
2) global morphometric alterations of the brain
3) biochemical alterations of neurotransmitter functions (e.g. DA and NA)

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4
Q
How do 
1) motor symptoms
2) impulsivity
3) inattention
develop from childhood to adolesence?
A

1) motor sympoms reduce with adolesence
2) impulsivity reduces but remains deviant
3) inattention becomes more prominent

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5
Q

Name 2 main groups of adult ADHD diagnosis

A

1) diagnosed as children -> easy to recognize

2) never diagnosed before -> difficult to recognize

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6
Q

Name the 4 diagnostic steps in ADHD diagnosis

A

1) assess current symptoms (past 6 months)
2) assess impact of symptoms on current functioning
3) establish childhood history of ADHD
4) obtain complete histories (self and family)

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7
Q

Name the two possible pharmacological treatments options of ADHD and an example of each

A

1) Stimulants (MPH, amphetamine)

2) Non-stimulants (antidepressants, antihypertensive agents)

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8
Q

What is the mechanism of action of stimulant drugs?

A

Release of norepinephrine ans dopamine

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9
Q

What are examples of non-pharmacological treatment options in ADHD?

A
Counseling
Education
Psychotherapy
Skill training program
Cognitive training program
Coaching
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10
Q

Name the 5 subforms of attention Van Zomeren and Brouwer (1994) distinghuish( Multi-dimensional model of attention)

A

1) alertness
2) vigilance/sustained attention
3) selective attention
4) divided attention
5) strategy/flexibility

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11
Q

What is Sustained Attention?

A

Sustained attention enables a subject to direct attention to one or more sources of information over a relatively long and unbroken period of time

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12
Q

What is Vigilance?

A

Vigilance is the ability to maintain attention over a prolonged period during which infrequent respose-demanding events occur

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13
Q

In what areas were impairments shown in ADHD adults and children on the Continuous Performance Test (measuring sustained attention)?

A
  • commission errors
  • omission errors
  • reaction time
  • variability of reaction time
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14
Q

What effect has been shown of MPH with regard to vigilance?

A

Off vs. On: only positive effect on omission errors

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15
Q

What are the two kinds of alertness + their definitions?

A

1) Tonic alertness = a relatively stable level of attention which changes slowly according to daily physiological variations of the organism
2) Phasic alertness = the ability to enhanc the activation level following a stimulus of high priority

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16
Q

What is Selective attention?

A

The ability to focus attention in the face of distracting or compensating stimuli

17
Q

What is Divides attention?

A

Required to respond simultaneously to multiple tasks or multiple task demands

18
Q

What is Flexibility (with regard to attention)?

A

The ability to shift focus of attention in order to control which information from competing sources will be selectively processed

19
Q

What are closed problems?

A

Problem which has a clearly defined initial state and goal state, can only be achieved by a certain solution and requires convergent thinking

20
Q

What are open problems?

A

Problem in which neither goal state nor solution are clearly defined, requires divergent thinking (most everyday problems are open problems)

21
Q

What are questions to ask by the neuropsychologist in search for markers that are distinctive regarding individual diagnosis of ADHD?

A

1) identification of potential candidates (cognitive functions)
2) promising/powerful candidates
3) typical profile across patients
4) comorbidity

22
Q

What are the 3 regulary found cognitive impairments in (adult) ADHD?

A

Vigilance
Inhibition
Working Memory