Ruf Barbara M, Bessette Katie L, Pearlson Godfrey D, Stevens Michael C
a Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center, Institute of Living is the Institution , Hartford , CT , USA.
b Department of Psychiatry , Brown Alpert Medical School , Providence , RI , USA.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2017 Jun;39(5):434-448. doi: 10.1080/13803395.2016.1232373. Epub 2016 Oct 3.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and anxiety are frequently comorbid disorders associated with different types of abnormal performance on neuropsychological tests. Although some studies have shown that comorbid anxiety alters ADHD test performance, results inconsistently show both improvements and worsening of different abilities, with failures to replicate across different anxiety disorders. Alternatively, trait anxiety may reflect a more stable influence on ADHD test performance than various diagnosable anxiety disorders.
To better understand the possible enhancing or deleterious effects of anxiety on ADHD cognitive impairments, this study examined the effect of individual differences in trait anxiety measured by the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC) on a battery of computerized, rapid-performance tests measuring attention and impulsivity-related performance in 98 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) Combined-Subtype ADHD adolescents and 123 healthy controls. It was hypothesized that trait anxiety would attenuate response inhibition and attention deficits in ADHD.
ADHD-diagnosed adolescents with higher trait anxiety performed better on indices of sustained attention, reaction time, and motor variability, and had altered overall test-performance strategy, while response inhibition was affected in both ADHD and non-ADHD.
This study provides the first evidence that pathological levels of anxiety are not needed to see differences in ADHD neuropsychological test performance. Instead, mildly elevated trait anxiety confers a protective influence by reducing the degree of impairment seen in ADHD. These findings suggest that better performing ADHD adolescents might have optimized levels of cortical arousal, and raise new questions about how best to identify the neurobiological substrates responsible for the beneficial effects.
注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)和焦虑症是常见的共病障碍,与神经心理学测试中的不同类型异常表现相关。尽管一些研究表明,共病焦虑会改变ADHD测试表现,但结果不一致地显示不同能力既有改善也有恶化,且在不同焦虑症中无法重复验证。另外,特质焦虑可能比各种可诊断的焦虑症对ADHD测试表现反映出更稳定的影响。
为了更好地理解焦虑对ADHD认知损伤可能产生的增强或有害影响,本研究考察了儿童多维焦虑量表(MASC)测量的特质焦虑个体差异对一组计算机化快速表现测试的影响,这些测试测量了98名《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)混合型ADHD青少年和123名健康对照者的注意力和冲动相关表现。研究假设特质焦虑会减轻ADHD中的反应抑制和注意力缺陷。
特质焦虑较高的ADHD诊断青少年在持续注意力、反应时间和运动变异性指标上表现更好,且改变了整体测试表现策略,而反应抑制在ADHD和非ADHD个体中均受到影响。
本研究提供了首个证据,即不需要病理性焦虑水平就能在ADHD神经心理学测试表现中看出差异。相反,轻度升高的特质焦虑通过降低ADHD中所见的损伤程度产生保护作用。这些发现表明,表现较好的ADHD青少年可能具有优化的皮质唤醒水平,并提出了关于如何最好地识别负责这些有益作用的神经生物学底物的新问题。