Aldenkamp A, van Bronswijk K, Braken M, Diepman L A, Verwey L E, van den Wittenboer G
Department of Behavioural Science and Psychological Services Epilepsy Centre Kempenhaeghe, Heeze, The Netherlands.
Child Neuropsychol. 2000 Sep;6(3):209-17. doi: 10.1076/chin.6.3.209.3153.
Both children with epilepsy and children with ADHD may be characterized by slowing on reaction-time measurement. This is of particular interest, as neuropsychological assessment is often requested in the differential diagnosis between children with short non-convulsive epileptic seizures and children with ADHD. In this study we attempt to identify patterns of impairment on timed tasks that are specific for epilepsy, relative to ADHD. This study was an open, controlled parallel-group clinical investigation which included two groups of patients: 60 children with ADHD and 60 children with epilepsy. These children were compared with a control group (n=30) on two types of timed cognitive tasks: tasks with low information load (simple reaction-time measurement) and tasks with high information load (multiple decision reaction-time measurement). The simple reaction-time measurements show significant differences between ADHD and controls (all except for visual RT non-dominant hand) and between epilepsy and controls (only one test). No significant differences were found between epilepsy and ADHD. The two tests with high information load show significant slowing compared with the controls for epilepsy on the Binary Choice Reaction-Time Test and for ADHD on the Visual Searching Test. On both tests also the differences between epilepsy and ADHD are significant. The two tests in combination have a relatively satisfactory potential to classify the children with ADHD (75% correct classification) and the children with epilepsy (55% correct classification). We may conclude that complex reaction-time tests (i.e., timed tasks with high information load) have potential for assessing the differential impact of ADHD and epilepsy on attentional function. These tasks specifically reveal general slowing for children with epilepsy and slowing as an effect of failures of inhibitory self control on unstructured tasks for ADHD.
患有癫痫的儿童和患有注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的儿童都可能表现出反应时间测量结果变慢。这一点尤其值得关注,因为在鉴别非惊厥性癫痫发作的儿童和患有ADHD的儿童时,经常需要进行神经心理学评估。在本研究中,我们试图确定相对于ADHD而言,癫痫特有的限时任务损伤模式。本研究是一项开放、对照的平行组临床调查,包括两组患者:60名患有ADHD的儿童和60名患有癫痫的儿童。这些儿童与一个对照组(n = 30)在两种限时认知任务上进行了比较:低信息负荷任务(简单反应时间测量)和高信息负荷任务(多重决策反应时间测量)。简单反应时间测量结果显示,ADHD组与对照组之间(除视觉反应时间非优势手外均有显著差异)以及癫痫组与对照组之间(只有一项测试有差异)存在显著差异。癫痫组与ADHD组之间未发现显著差异。在二元选择反应时间测试中,癫痫组与对照组相比,以及在视觉搜索测试中,ADHD组与对照组相比,两项高信息负荷测试均显示出显著变慢。在这两项测试中,癫痫组与ADHD组之间的差异也很显著。这两项测试结合起来,对ADHD儿童(正确分类率75%)和癫痫儿童(正确分类率55%)进行分类具有相对令人满意的潜力。我们可以得出结论,复杂反应时间测试(即高信息负荷的限时任务)有潜力评估ADHD和癫痫对注意力功能的不同影响。这些任务特别揭示了癫痫儿童普遍的反应变慢,以及ADHD儿童在非结构化任务中因抑制性自我控制失败而导致的反应变慢。