Animal Models of Attention-Deficit Hyperkinetic Disorder (ADHD)

Author(s):  
Nidhika Sharma ◽  
Sumit Jamwal ◽  
Puneet Kumar Bansal
Author(s):  
Bart Ellenbroek ◽  
Alfonso Abizaid ◽  
Shimon Amir ◽  
Martina de Zwaan ◽  
Sarah Parylak ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Eric Taylor

This chapter presents an account of the clinical picture of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and the severe form hyperkinetic disorder. They are disabilities that change with development and are often accompanied by other problems that can mask it or themselves be masked by it. Clinical and standardized ways of making the diagnosis are described. Inattentiveness and impulsive hyperactivity are rewarding challenges for diagnosis and treatment in adulthood, as well as during childhood and adolescence.


Author(s):  
Tobias Banaschewski ◽  
David Coghill ◽  
Marina Danckaerts ◽  
Manfred Dpfner ◽  
Luis Rohde ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 92 (3) ◽  
pp. 849-852 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Niederhofer ◽  
B. Hackenberg ◽  
R. Stier ◽  
K. Lanzendörfer ◽  
G. Kemmler ◽  
...  

Standardized assessment of a family's characteristics (conflict management, cohesion, etc.) is not used routinely, although these variables may play an important role in the course of psychological disorders in children. The present study investigated differences within the features of families of children with hyperkinetic and emotional disorders. Families of 20 boys diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperkinetic Disorder and 20 boys with Emotional Disorder (ages 6–12 years) by giving the Mannheim Parents Interview and the teacher's form of the Conners scale were included for evaluation and compared with a matched, healthy control group of 20 boys. Parents were asked to complete a form assessing the family's characteristics (“Familienklima-Testsystem”), including Cohesion, Expressiveness, Conflict Tendency, Individual Independence, Achievement Orientation, Intellectual-Cultural Orientation, Active-Recreational Orientation, Moral-Religious Emphasis, and Organization. Comparison of groups was made by the Kruskal-Wallis test and Mann-Whitney U test. There are significantly more conflicts in families whose children belong to the two disorder groups. Compared with a matched healthy control group, there is low Expressiveness, Independence, and Cultural and Active-Recreational Orientation in the Emotional Disorder group and a significant lack of Organization and Cohesion in the Attention Deficit Hyperkinetic Disorder group. Altogether there seems to be a significant association of Attention Deficit Hyperkinetic Disorder symptoms with the family's Cohesion and Organization. One implication is that therapists focus their efforts not only on the children with disorders but also on their families.


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