ADHD Now, Dementia Later?

109 14
ADHD Now, Dementia Later? Jan. 20, 2011 -- Adults with symptoms of ADHD, or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, are more than three times as likely as other adults to develop a form of dementia later in life, according to new research from Argentina.

''We found a higher risk of dementia with Lewy bodies in patients with preceding adult ADHD symptoms," write the researchers from Hospital Italiano Buenos Aires. The study is published in the European Journal of Neurology.

Lewy body dementia (LBD) affects about 1.3 million people in the U.S., according to the Lewy Body Dementia Association. Lewy bodies is the name given to the abnormal protein deposits that disrupt the brain's normal functioning.

The symptoms include cognitive impairment, like the more well-known dementia, Alzheimer's disease. However, in the Lewy body form, patients can also have visual hallucinations, fluctuation in cognition -- sometimes appearing fine, other times not -- and motor abnormalities similar to those in Parkinson's disease patients.

But a U.S.-based expert cautions that the study found an association between ADHD symptoms and the dementia, not cause and effect. "It may be that both of these disorders are linked to some other risk factor that is common for both," says James B. Leverenz, MD, chair of the Lewy Body Dementia Association's scientific advisory council and professor of neurology and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle. He reviewed the study for WebMD.

ADHD and Dementia: The Study


Led by Angel Golimstok at the Hospital Italiano Buenos Aires, researchers evaluated 360 patients with dementia -- 109 had LBD and 251 had Alzheimer's -- comparing them with 149 healthy people matched by sex, education, and age.

Then they looked at how often ADHD symptoms had been reported earlier. In patients who were too impaired to answer, they got information from an informant who had known the patient for at least 10 years and had information from a close relative who knew the patient in childhood. The researchers say that since this method has not been validated, they refer to the patients as having ADHD symptoms, rather than being diagnosed with ADHD.
Source...
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up here to get the latest news, updates and special offers delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.