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The effect of methylphenidate on response inhibition and the event-related potential of children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

The effect of methylphenidate on response inhibition and the event-related potential of children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
The effect of methylphenidate on response inhibition and the event-related potential of children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) appear to be deficient in inhibitory processes, as reflected in behavioural and electrophysiological measures. This study examined the effect of methylphenidate (MPH) on response inhibition in children with AD/HD. Event-related potentials (ERPs) and skin conductance level (SCL) were recorded from 18 boys with AD/HD and 18 controls while they performed a cued Go/Nogo task with 70% Go probability. All participants performed the task twice, with an hour interval between test sessions. At the beginning of this interval children with AD/HD took their normal morning dose of MPH. The AD/HD group showed lower SCL than controls pre-medication, a difference not found subsequent to the administration of MPH. While the AD/HD group made more overall errors (omission + commission) pre-medication, and continued to make more omission errors than controls post-medication, the groups became comparable on the number of commission errors, suggesting MPH ameliorates deficits in response inhibition. Children with AD/HD displayed enhanced N1 and P2 amplitudes, and reduced N2 amplitudes relative to controls. These differences were not significant post-medication, at least partly attributable to the action of MPH. This study is unusual in the concurrent examination of electrodermal and electrophysiological measures of medication effects in children with AD/HD, with the retesting of both the AD/HD and control groups allowing a more valid estimate of the effects of medication, rather than assuming that retesting does not have a substantial impact.
ad/hd, event-related potential, inhibition, methylphenidate, skin conductance level
0167-8760
47-58
Broyd, S.J.
e15c6cdb-c771-452e-b0d4-22de82b6ba8d
Johnstone, S.J.
9d39f70e-22a7-487c-a877-049bc286ca95
Barry, R.J.
d0a7f116-c2a2-4ceb-87a0-bb7bcfebacf6
Clarke, A.R.
744624a2-10dc-4ae7-98cb-a2aef22d113f
McCarthy, R.
c8936841-8eeb-40da-8bfb-bacae664b2d4
Selikowitz, M.
6a4fafe3-a9d0-4bea-b76b-ad2eb11af909
Lawrence, C.A.
8420a683-7e75-48f7-bea6-81043a7bc856
Broyd, S.J.
e15c6cdb-c771-452e-b0d4-22de82b6ba8d
Johnstone, S.J.
9d39f70e-22a7-487c-a877-049bc286ca95
Barry, R.J.
d0a7f116-c2a2-4ceb-87a0-bb7bcfebacf6
Clarke, A.R.
744624a2-10dc-4ae7-98cb-a2aef22d113f
McCarthy, R.
c8936841-8eeb-40da-8bfb-bacae664b2d4
Selikowitz, M.
6a4fafe3-a9d0-4bea-b76b-ad2eb11af909
Lawrence, C.A.
8420a683-7e75-48f7-bea6-81043a7bc856

Broyd, S.J., Johnstone, S.J., Barry, R.J., Clarke, A.R., McCarthy, R., Selikowitz, M. and Lawrence, C.A. (2005) The effect of methylphenidate on response inhibition and the event-related potential of children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 58 (1), 47-58. (doi:10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2005.03.008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) appear to be deficient in inhibitory processes, as reflected in behavioural and electrophysiological measures. This study examined the effect of methylphenidate (MPH) on response inhibition in children with AD/HD. Event-related potentials (ERPs) and skin conductance level (SCL) were recorded from 18 boys with AD/HD and 18 controls while they performed a cued Go/Nogo task with 70% Go probability. All participants performed the task twice, with an hour interval between test sessions. At the beginning of this interval children with AD/HD took their normal morning dose of MPH. The AD/HD group showed lower SCL than controls pre-medication, a difference not found subsequent to the administration of MPH. While the AD/HD group made more overall errors (omission + commission) pre-medication, and continued to make more omission errors than controls post-medication, the groups became comparable on the number of commission errors, suggesting MPH ameliorates deficits in response inhibition. Children with AD/HD displayed enhanced N1 and P2 amplitudes, and reduced N2 amplitudes relative to controls. These differences were not significant post-medication, at least partly attributable to the action of MPH. This study is unusual in the concurrent examination of electrodermal and electrophysiological measures of medication effects in children with AD/HD, with the retesting of both the AD/HD and control groups allowing a more valid estimate of the effects of medication, rather than assuming that retesting does not have a substantial impact.

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More information

Published date: January 2005
Keywords: ad/hd, event-related potential, inhibition, methylphenidate, skin conductance level

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 48223
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/48223
ISSN: 0167-8760
PURE UUID: eb1c411a-da80-4957-8e68-d5440458dd01

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Date deposited: 06 Sep 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:44

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Contributors

Author: S.J. Broyd
Author: S.J. Johnstone
Author: R.J. Barry
Author: A.R. Clarke
Author: R. McCarthy
Author: M. Selikowitz
Author: C.A. Lawrence

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