ADHD symptoms in non-treatment seeking young adults: Relationship with other forms of impulsivity
ADHD symptoms in non-treatment seeking young adults: Relationship with other forms of impulsivity
Objective Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been associated with various manifestations of impulsivity in adults, including elevated rates of other impulsive disorders, substance use, questionnaire-based impulsivity scores, and inhibitory dysregulation on neurocognitive tests. The relationship between ADHD and all these other forms of impulsivity has yet to be explored within the context of a single comprehensive study. Methods A total of 423 young adults, who gambled ≥5 times in the preceding year, were recruited using media advertisements and undertook detailed assessment including structured psychiatric interview, questionnaires, and neurocognitive tests. Participants with ADHD symptoms were identified using the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale Screener (ASRS-V1.1) and were compared to controls using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). Results ADHD symptoms were found in 20.3% of the sample, but only 7.3% of these subjects had ever received a formal diagnosis. ADHD symptoms were associated with significantly lower quality of life, lower self-esteem, higher emotional dysregulation, higher impulsivity questionnaire scores, more problematic Internet use, greater occurrence of psychiatric disorders, and impaired stop-signal reaction times. Of these variables, stop-signal reaction times and Barratt attentional impulsiveness were the strongest predictors of group classification. Conclusions ADHD symptoms are common and under-diagnosed in young adults who gamble, and are most strongly linked with certain other types of impulsivity (questionnaire- and cognitive-based measures) and with emotional dysregulation, suggesting that these are each important considerations in understanding the pathophysiology of the disorder, but also potential treatment targets. It is necessary to question whether treatment for adult ADHD could be enhanced by considering self-esteem, emotional reactivity, and impaired inhibitory control as specific treatment targets, in addition to the core diagnostic symptoms of the disorder.
ADHD, cognition, gambling, impulsivity, inhibition
22-30
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
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Ioannidis, Konstantinos
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Leppink, Eric W.
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Niaz, Faiza
f268ad82-d33b-4237-9644-62c23d78c475
Redden, Sarah A.
f2109178-7158-46c7-971f-4a602a3adf59
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
1 February 2017
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Ioannidis, Konstantinos
0dfc1d89-41be-4d02-ae50-698117e80141
Leppink, Eric W.
61a0a712-e471-49fb-99b6-12dc64c7d372
Niaz, Faiza
f268ad82-d33b-4237-9644-62c23d78c475
Redden, Sarah A.
f2109178-7158-46c7-971f-4a602a3adf59
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
Chamberlain, Samuel R., Ioannidis, Konstantinos, Leppink, Eric W., Niaz, Faiza, Redden, Sarah A. and Grant, Jon E.
(2017)
ADHD symptoms in non-treatment seeking young adults: Relationship with other forms of impulsivity.
CNS Spectrums, 22 (1), .
(doi:10.1017/S1092852915000875).
Abstract
Objective Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been associated with various manifestations of impulsivity in adults, including elevated rates of other impulsive disorders, substance use, questionnaire-based impulsivity scores, and inhibitory dysregulation on neurocognitive tests. The relationship between ADHD and all these other forms of impulsivity has yet to be explored within the context of a single comprehensive study. Methods A total of 423 young adults, who gambled ≥5 times in the preceding year, were recruited using media advertisements and undertook detailed assessment including structured psychiatric interview, questionnaires, and neurocognitive tests. Participants with ADHD symptoms were identified using the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale Screener (ASRS-V1.1) and were compared to controls using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). Results ADHD symptoms were found in 20.3% of the sample, but only 7.3% of these subjects had ever received a formal diagnosis. ADHD symptoms were associated with significantly lower quality of life, lower self-esteem, higher emotional dysregulation, higher impulsivity questionnaire scores, more problematic Internet use, greater occurrence of psychiatric disorders, and impaired stop-signal reaction times. Of these variables, stop-signal reaction times and Barratt attentional impulsiveness were the strongest predictors of group classification. Conclusions ADHD symptoms are common and under-diagnosed in young adults who gamble, and are most strongly linked with certain other types of impulsivity (questionnaire- and cognitive-based measures) and with emotional dysregulation, suggesting that these are each important considerations in understanding the pathophysiology of the disorder, but also potential treatment targets. It is necessary to question whether treatment for adult ADHD could be enhanced by considering self-esteem, emotional reactivity, and impaired inhibitory control as specific treatment targets, in addition to the core diagnostic symptoms of the disorder.
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Published date: 1 February 2017
Keywords:
ADHD, cognition, gambling, impulsivity, inhibition
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Local EPrints ID: 492979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492979
ISSN: 1092-8529
PURE UUID: 775e03e6-e5be-4f4c-91d8-4075dd26b339
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Date deposited: 21 Aug 2024 17:06
Last modified: 30 Aug 2024 02:00
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Author:
Samuel R. Chamberlain
Author:
Konstantinos Ioannidis
Author:
Eric W. Leppink
Author:
Faiza Niaz
Author:
Sarah A. Redden
Author:
Jon E. Grant
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