The role of neuropsychological evaluation in the diagnosis of adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a growing area of research and clinical interest. Our review of the literature indicates that adults with ADHD demonstrate subtle impairments on select measures of attention and executive functions, auditory-verbal list learning, and complex information processing speed relative to normal controls. The validity of these findings is nonetheless hampered by several limitations, including methodological and sample variability, a restricted range of interpretive techniques, and uncertain discriminant validity. Recommendations are offered to advance the cognitive and neurobehavioral understanding of this disorder and to enhance the utility of neuropsychological methods for diagnosis and management of adults with ADHD.
Several reports show that traumatic brain injury (TBI) results in abnormalities in the coordinated activation among brain regions. Because most previous studies examined moderate/severe TBI, the extensiveness of functional connectivity abnormalities and their relationship to postconcussive complaints or white matter microstructural damage are unclear in mild TBI. This study characterized widespread injury effects on multiple integrated neural networks typically observed during a task-unconstrained "resting state" in mild TBI patients. Whole brain functional connectivity for twelve separate networks was identified using independent component analysis (ICA) of fMRI data collected from thirty mild TBI patients mostly free of macroscopic intracerebral injury and thirty demographically-matched healthy control participants. Voxelwise group comparisons found abnormal mild TBI functional connectivity in every brain network identified by ICA, including visual processing, motor, limbic, and numerous circuits believed to underlie executive cognition. Abnormalities not only included functional connectivity deficits, but also enhancements possibly reflecting compensatory neural processes. Postconcussive symptom severity was linked to abnormal regional connectivity within nearly every brain network identified, particularly anterior cingulate. A recently developed multivariate technique that identifies links between whole brain profiles of functional and anatomical connectivity identified several novel mild TBI abnormalities, and represents a potentially important new tool in the study of the complex neurobiological sequelae of TBI.
ADHD adults (N = 26) were compared to normal controls
(N = 26) on 6 neuropsychological measures believed sensitive
to frontal lobe–executive functioning. MANOVA analyses
and subsequent univariate tests indicated that most of
the neuropsychological measures discriminated between the
two groups. To address clinical significance, diagnostic
classification rates were also generated for each measure
individually, and for the battery as a whole. Levels of
positive predictive power (PPP) for each of the 6 measures
(83–100%) indicated that abnormal scores on these
tests were good predictors of ADHD. However, estimates
of negative predictive power (NPP) suggested that normal
scores poorly predicted the absence of ADHD. When classification
rates were calculated for the overall battery classification
accuracy improved substantially. Thus, neuropsychological
tests can differentiate adults suffering from ADHD from
adults without ADHD, while also providing good classification
accuracy. Finally, the pattern of neurobehavioral impairments
exemplified through the Summary Index scores was interpreted
as consistent with conceptualizations of ADHD depicting
mild neurologic dysfunction in networks associated with
the frontal lobes. (JINS, 1999, 5, 222–233.)
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