注意缺陷和多动障碍(ADHD)筛查和诊断史的情绪、行为和认知相关性:性别/性别差异

Journal of neurology & neuromedicine Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-02-01 DOI:10.29245/2572.942x/2021/1.1278
Shervin Assari
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:虽然临床研究已经记录了注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)儿童在情感、行为和认知功能上的性别差异,但尚不清楚这些性别差异是由于转诊和诊断的差异,还是在我们筛查ADHD的社区样本时也能看到。如果在有诊断史的人群中存在这些性别差异,但在筛查中无法发现,那么这些差异是不公平的,是可以预防的,并且是由于性别(转诊和诊断中的社会过程)而不是性别。目的:使用来自9-10岁健康发育儿童的社区样本数据,我们探讨认知、情绪、行为和健康状况与阳性筛查与诊断ADHD病史之间的相关性的性别差异。方法:青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究包括10,171名9至10岁的美国儿童的全国样本。该样本包括1488名有精神病史的儿童和8683名没有精神病史的儿童。两个自变量是筛查和ADHD病史。以下变量是结果:症状严重程度、认知功能、身体质量指数(BMI)、内化、外化和总行为障碍。性别是调节因子,年龄、种族、民族、教育程度、家庭收入和家庭结构是协变量。混合效应回归模型用于调整数据的嵌套性质。结果:ADHD阳性筛查和诊断史均与较差的认知功能、较高的内在化、外在化、总问题行为、较高的注意力不集中(ADHD症状)和较低的BMI相关。性别改变了ADHD外化诊断史与总体行为问题和认知功能之间的关系,但没有改变ADHD外化筛查阳性结果。性别不影响ADHD阳性筛查与BMI或ADHD症状诊断史之间的关联。ADHD的诊断史和阳性筛查与男孩比女孩更高的内化有关。结论:男性和女性的行为和认知表现与诊断史(但未进行ADHD阳性筛查)存在不同的相关性。由于性别差异存在于相关的诊断史中,而非阳性筛查中,一些观察到的性别差异是由于转诊和诊断的不同,而不是由于ADHD在社区中的不同表现。这一发现表明,一些被认为是由生物学和遗传造成的所谓“性别差异”可能是“性别差异”,并且是可以改变的。这一点很重要,因为尽管性别差异是可以预防和改变的,但性别差异却不能。
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Emotional, Behavioral, and Cognitive Correlates of Attention Deficit and Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) Screening and Diagnosis History: Sex/Gender Differences.

Background: While clinical studies have documented sex differences in emotional, behavioral, and cognitive function of children with Attention Deficit and Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD), it is unknown if these sex differences are due to differences in referral and diagnosis or if they can be also seen when we screen a community sample for ADHD. If these sex differences exist in populations with a diagnosis history but cannot be seen in screening, then they are unfair, preventable, and due to gender (social processes in referral and diagnosis) rather than sex.

Aim: Using the data from a community sample of 9-10-year-old healthy developing children, we explored sex differences in the associations between cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and health status with positive screening vs. history of diagnosed ADHD.

Methods: The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study included a national sample of 10,171 American children between ages 9 and 10 years old. This sample included 1,488 children with a history of psychiatric diagnosis and 8,683 children without a diagnosis. The two independent variables were screening and history of ADHD. The following variables were outcomes: symptom severity, cognitive function, body mass index (BMI), internalizing, externalizing, and total behavioral disorders. Sex was the moderator, and age, race, ethnicity, education, household income, and family structure were covariates. Mixed-effects regression models were used to adjust for the nested nature of the data.

Results: Positive screening for ADHD and a history of diagnosis were both associated with worse cognitive function, higher internalizing, externalizing, total problem behaviors, higher inattention (ADHD symptoms), and lower BMI. Sex altered the association between history of diagnosis but not positive screening for ADHD with externalizing, and total behavioral problems as well as cognitive function. Sex did not affect the associations between positive screening for ADHD or a history of diagnosis with BMI or ADHD symptoms. Both history of diagnosis and positive screening for ADHD were associated with higher internalizing for boys than girls.

Conclusion: History of diagnosis, but not positive screening for ADHD, is differently associated with behavioral and cognitive performance of males and females. As sex differences are seen in correlates of history of diagnosis but not positive screening, some of the observed sex differences are due to differential referral and diagnosis rather than differential presentation of ADHD in the community. This finding suggests that some of the so-called "sex differences" that are believed to be due to biology and heritable may be "gender differences" and modifiable. This is important because while gender differences are preventable and modifiable, sex differences are not.

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Emotional, Behavioral, and Cognitive Correlates of Attention Deficit and Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) Screening and Diagnosis History: Sex/Gender Differences. Commentary: Fc Gamma Receptors are Expressed in the Developing Rat Brain and Activate Downstream Signaling Molecules upon Cross-Linking with Immune Complex. "Commentary: Alcohol Consumption Impairs the Ependymal Cilia Motility in the Brain Ventricles". Epidemiology Informs Randomized Clinical Trials of Cognitive Impairments and Late-Onset, Sporadic Dementias. Commentary: miR-132/212 Modulates Seasonal Adaptation and Dendritic Morphology of the Central Circadian Clock.
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