Links Among Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Symptoms and Psycholinguistic Abilities Are Different for Children With and Without Developmental Language Disorder.

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Epub Date: 2024-07-09 DOI:10.1044/2024_AJSLP-23-00388
Sean M Redmond, Andrea C Ash, Haojia Li, Yue Zhang
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Abstract

Purpose: Both developmental language disorder (DLD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) represent relatively common and chronic neurodevelopmental conditions associated with increased risk for poor academic and interpersonal outcomes. Reports of common co-occurrence suggest these neurodevelopmental disruptions might also be linked. Most of the data available on the issue have been based on case-control studies vulnerable to ascertainment and other biases.

Method: Seventy-eight children, representing four neurodevelopmental profiles (DLD, ADHD, co-occurring ADHD + DLD, and neurotypical development), were administered a battery of psycholinguistic tests. Parents provided standardized ratings of the severity of their children's inattention, hyperactivity/impulsivity, and executive function symptoms. Examiners were blinded to children's clinical status. Group differences, correlations, and best subset regression analyses were used to examine potential impacts of children's ADHD symptoms on their psycholinguistic abilities.

Results: For children with DLD, significant links between their ADHD symptoms and psycholinguistic abilities were limited to the contributions of elevated hyperactivity/impulsivity symptoms to lower pragmatic abilities. For children without DLD, inattention symptoms contributed to lower levels of performance in pragmatic, sentence recall, receptive vocabulary, and narrative abilities.

Discussion: Links among children's ADHD symptoms and their psycholinguistic abilities were different for children with and without DLD. Implications for the provision of clinical services are discussed.

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注意力缺陷/过度活跃症症状与心理语言能力之间的联系对有和没有发育性语言障碍的儿童有所不同。
目的:发育性语言障碍(DLD)和注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)都是相对常见的慢性神经发育疾病,与学业和人际关系不良风险增加有关。关于这两种疾病共同发生的报道表明,这两种神经发育障碍也可能存在联系。有关这一问题的大部分数据都是基于病例对照研究,容易受到确定性和其他偏差的影响:方法:对 78 名儿童进行了一系列心理语言测试,这些儿童代表了四种神经发育特征(DLD、ADHD、共患 ADHD + DLD 和神经典型发育)。家长对孩子注意力不集中、多动/冲动和执行功能症状的严重程度进行标准化评分。测试人员对儿童的临床状况进行了盲测。我们采用了组间差异、相关性和最佳子集回归分析来研究儿童多动症状对其心理语言能力的潜在影响:结果:对于患有 DLD 的儿童而言,ADHD 症状与他们的心理语言能力之间的重要联系仅限于多动/冲动症状的升高对较低的语用能力的影响。而对于无 DLD 的儿童来说,注意力不集中症状会导致他们在语用能力、句子回忆能力、接受性词汇和叙述能力方面的表现较低:讨论:有多动症症状和无多动症儿童的心理语言能力之间的联系是不同的。讨论:有多动症症状的儿童和没有多动症的儿童的心理语言能力之间存在差异,这对提供临床服务具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.50%
发文量
353
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Mission: AJSLP publishes peer-reviewed research and other scholarly articles on all aspects of clinical practice in speech-language pathology. The journal is an international outlet for clinical research pertaining to screening, detection, diagnosis, management, and outcomes of communication and swallowing disorders across the lifespan as well as the etiologies and characteristics of these disorders. Because of its clinical orientation, the journal disseminates research findings applicable to diverse aspects of clinical practice in speech-language pathology. AJSLP seeks to advance evidence-based practice by disseminating the results of new studies as well as providing a forum for critical reviews and meta-analyses of previously published work. Scope: The broad field of speech-language pathology, including aphasia; apraxia of speech and childhood apraxia of speech; aural rehabilitation; augmentative and alternative communication; cognitive impairment; craniofacial disorders; dysarthria; fluency disorders; language disorders in children; speech sound disorders; swallowing, dysphagia, and feeding disorders; and voice disorders.
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