Consequences of vestibular hypofunction in children with ADHD/DCD

Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) demonstrate a heterogeneous sensorimotor, emotional, and cognitive profile. Comorbid sensorimotor imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation are particularly prevalent among their non-core symptoms. Studies in other populations presen...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of paediatric neurology 2024-09, Vol.52, p.1-9
Hauptverfasser: Gur-Hartman, Tamar, Tarrasch, Ricardo, Zerem, Ayelet, Sokol-Novinsky, Riki, Elyoseph, Zohar, Lerman-Sagie, Tally, Mintz, Matti
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container_title European journal of paediatric neurology
container_volume 52
creator Gur-Hartman, Tamar
Tarrasch, Ricardo
Zerem, Ayelet
Sokol-Novinsky, Riki
Elyoseph, Zohar
Lerman-Sagie, Tally
Mintz, Matti
description Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) demonstrate a heterogeneous sensorimotor, emotional, and cognitive profile. Comorbid sensorimotor imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation are particularly prevalent among their non-core symptoms. Studies in other populations presented these three comorbid dysfunctions in the context of vestibular hypofunction. To test whether there is a subgroup of children with ADHD who have vestibular hypofunction presenting with concomitant imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation. Children with ADHD-only (n = 28), ADHD + Developmental Coordination Disorder (ADHD + DCD; n = 38), and Typical Development (TD; n = 19) were evaluated for vestibular function by the Dynamic Visual Acuity test (DVA-t), balance by the Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of motor proficiency (BOT-2), panic anxiety by the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders questionnaire-Child version (SCARED-C), and spatial navigation by the Triangular Completion test (TC-t). Children with ADHD vs. TD presented with a high rate of vestibular hypofunction (65 vs. 0 %), imbalance (42 vs. 0 %), panic anxiety (27 vs. 11 %), and spatial disorientation (30 vs. 5 %). Children with ADHD + DCD contributed more frequent and severe vestibular hypofunction and imbalance than children with ADHD-only (74 vs. 54 %; 58 vs. 21 %, respectively). A concomitant presence of imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation was observed in 33 % of children with ADHD, all sharing vestibular hypofunction. Vestibular hypofunction may be the common pathophysiology of imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation in children. These comorbidities are preferentially present in children with ADHD + DCD rather than ADHD-only, thus likely related to DCD rather than to ADHD disorder. Children with this profile may benefit from a vestibular rehabilitation intervention. •A subgroup of children with ADHD, mainly with ADHD + DCD, demonstrated vestibular hypofunction.•The subgroup with vestibular hypofunction presented with concomitant imbalance, anxiety, and spatial disorientation.•Identification of this subgroup in the clinical milieu may redirect the treatment to the vestibular system.
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subjects ADHD
Anxiety
DCD
Imbalance
Spatial
Vestibular hypofunction
title Consequences of vestibular hypofunction in children with ADHD/DCD
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