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Developmental trajectories of brain volume abnormalities in children and adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Castellanos, F Xavier; Lee, Patti P; Sharp, Wendy; Jeffries, Neal O; Greenstein, Deanna K; Clasen, Liv S; Blumenthal, Jonathan D; James, Regina S; Ebens, Christen L; Walter, James M; Zijdenbos, Alex; Evans, Alan C; Giedd, Jay N; Rapoport, Judith L
CONTEXT: Various anatomic brain abnormalities have been reported for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), with varying methods, small samples, cross-sectional designs, and without accounting for stimulant drug exposure. OBJECTIVE: To compare regional brain volumes at initial scan and their change over time in medicated and previously unmedicated male and female patients with ADHD and healthy controls. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Case-control study conducted from 1991-2001 at the National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Md, of 152 children and adolescents with ADHD (age range, 5-18 years) and 139 age- and sex-matched controls (age range, 4.5-19 years) recruited from the local community, who contributed 544 anatomic magnetic resonance images. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Using completely automated methods, initial volumes and prospective age-related changes of total cerebrum, cerebellum, gray and white matter for the 4 major lobes, and caudate nucleus of the brain were compared in patients and controls. RESULTS: On initial scan, patients with ADHD had significantly smaller brain volumes in all regions, even after adjustment for significant covariates. This global difference was reflected in smaller total cerebral volumes (-3.2%, adjusted F(1,280) = 8.30, P =.004) and in significantly smaller cerebellar volumes (-3.5%, adjusted F(1,280) = 12.29, P =.001). Compared with controls, previously unmedicated children with ADHD demonstrated significantly smaller total cerebral volumes (overall F(2,288) = 6.65; all pairwise comparisons Bonferroni corrected, -5.8%; P =.002) and cerebellar volumes (-6.2%, F( 2,288) = 8.97, P<.001). Unmedicated children with ADHD also exhibited strikingly smaller total white matter volumes (F(2,288) = 11.65) compared with controls (-10.7%, P<.001) and with medicated children with ADHD (-8.9%, P<.001). Volumetric abnormalities persisted with age in total and regional cerebral measures (P =.002) and in the cerebellum (P =.003). Caudate nucleus volumes were initially abnormal for patients with ADHD (P =.05), but diagnostic differences disappeared as caudate volumes decreased for patients and controls during adolescence. Results were comparable for male and female patients on all measures. Frontal and temporal gray matter, caudate, and cerebellar volumes correlated significantly with parent- and clinician-rated severity measures within the ADHD sample (Pearson coefficients between -0.16 and -0.26; all P values were <.05). CONCLUSIONS: Developmental trajectories for all structures, except caudate, remain roughly parallel for patients and controls during childhood and adolescence, suggesting that genetic and/or early environmental influences on brain development in ADHD are fixed, nonprogressive, and unrelated to stimulant treatment
PMID: 12365958
ISSN: 0098-7484
CID: 34374
Effects of caffeine on development and behavior in infancy and childhood: a review of the published literature
Castellanos, F X; Rapoport, J L
The Medline literature on the behavioral effects of caffeine in infants and children are reviewed. There has been little recent work in this area. Generally, caffeine is well tolerated in usual dietary amounts, and there is evidence that individuals differ in their susceptibility to caffeine-related adverse effects, which in turn may influence their consumption. Overall, the effects of caffeine in children seem to be modest and typically innocuous
PMID: 12204387
ISSN: 0278-6915
CID: 34375
Neuroscience of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: the search for endophenotypes
Castellanos, F Xavier; Tannock, Rosemary
PMID: 12154363
ISSN: 1471-0048
CID: 34376
Cytogenetic abnormalities in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Bastain, Theresa M; Lewczyk, Caroline M; Sharp, Wendy S; James, Regina S; Long, Robert T; Eagen, Patricia B; Ebens, Christen L; Meck, Jeanne M; Chan, Wai-Yee; Sidransky, Ellen; Rapoport, Judith L; Castellanos, F Xavier
OBJECTIVE: To systematically assess the prevalence of fragile X syndrome, velocardiofacial syndrome, and other cytogenetic abnormalities in a group of children with attention-defict/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). METHOD: Blood samples were obtained from 100 children (64 boys) with combined type ADHD and normal intelligence and analyzed for the presence of fragile X mutation expansions, the 22q11.2 microdeletion associated with velocardiofacial syndrome, and cytogenetic abnormalities that would be detected with high resolution chromosomal banding. RESULTS: One girl with ADHD had a sex chromosome aneuploidy (47,XXX). One boy had a premutation-sized allele for fragile X; no subjects showed the full mutation. Testing for 22q11.2 microdeletion was negative for all subjects with ADHD screened. None of these differences exceeded those expected by chance. CONCLUSIONS: In the absence of clinical signs or positive family history, these relatively expensive laboratory assessments are not clinically indicated for children with ADHD and normal intelligence, and are not recommended as a component of other genetic investigations of this disorder
PMID: 12108805
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 34377
[Syndrome of attention deficit with hyperactivity as the expression of an organic functional disorder]
Castellanos, F X; Acosta, M T
INTRODUCTION: The diagnosis of ADHD can be determined reliably from the clinical history, but the causes and pathophysiology of the disorder remain unclear. CONCLUSIONS: Recent findings using magnetic resonance imaging, and imaging with PET and SPECT, as well as studies that probe brain functioning through transcranial magnetic stimulation suggest that circuits linking prefrontal cortex, striatum, and cerebellum are not functioning normally in ADHD
PMID: 12389185
ISSN: 0210-0010
CID: 34373
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): feasibility of linkage analysis in a genetic isolate using extended and multigenerational pedigrees
Arcos-Burgos, M; Castellanos, F X; Lopera, F; Pineda, D; Palacio, J D; Garcia, M; Henao, G C; Palacio, L G; Berg, K; Bailey-Wilson, J E; Muenke, M
Segregation analyses converge in explaining the predisposition to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) as the consequence of a major gene and exclude purely environmental or cultural transmission. As a result of the ADHD phenotype restrictions, collection of extended families or design of linkage studies using families has been extremely difficult and thus currently linkage studies have been performed using only concordant or discordant sib-pairs rather than large families. On the other hand, intergenerational studies are represented by the transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) using trios. We collected pedigree data on ADHD from the Paisa community from Antioquia, Colombia, a genetic isolate. The goal of this study was to genetically map a putative gene predisposing to ADHD in a set of 27 multigenerational Paisa families. Here we present the results of a power simulation using SIMLINK to detect linkage of ADHD. ADHD was assumed to be a dichotomous trait with incomplete penetrance and a phenocopy rate of 3% in males and 0.2% in females. We simulated cosegregation of the trait and a marker locus in our pedigrees. We assumed Hardy-Weinberg and linkage equilibrium, equally frequent marker alleles and evaluated power at several recombination fractions between the trait and marker loci. Also, the ADHD trait was assumed to be genetically heterogeneous and different functions of age-dependent penetrance were simulated. We found exceptionally good power to detect linkage (expected LOD > 14 if theta is 0.1 or less), and that the presence of heterogeneity up to 50% does not affect substantially the projected LOD scores even for a theta recombination value of 0.05 (eLOD > 5.87). Having now obtained blood samples and confirmatory interviews in five families (representing 20% of the projected number of families), we performed a new analysis. The expected mean LOD in these five families reached values close to 10 and remained invariant when heterogeneity and different penetrance models were considered. We discuss the relative benefits of using extended and multigenerational families for genetic mapping studies as opposed to using nuclear families, affected sib pairs or sporadic cases which require the collection of over 1000 analytical units to get the same power exhibited by the small number of pedigrees described here
PMID: 12081716
ISSN: 0009-9163
CID: 34378
Anatomic brain MRI in monozygotic twins discordant for Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) [Meeting Abstract]
Castellanos, FX; Sharp, W; Giedd, JN; Greenstein, DK; Gottesman, R; Rapoport, JL
ISI:000174980400240
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 27474
Double-blind, placebo-controlled study of single-dose amphetamine formulations in ADHD
James RS; Sharp WS; Bastain TM; Lee PP; Walter JM; Czarnolewski M; Castellanos FX
OBJECTIVE: To compare the efficacy and time course of single morning doses of Adderall, extended-release, and immediate-release dextroamphetamine sulfate. METHOD: Thirty-five children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, combined type, were given Adderall, immediate-release dextroamphetamine, dextroamphetamine Spansules, and placebo in a randomized, double-blind, crossover study. Behavior ratings, locomotor activity measurements, and academic measures were obtained over a period of 8 weeks. RESULTS: All three drugs exhibited robust efficacy versus placebo on nearly all measures. The effects of dextroamphetamine Spansules were less robust in the morning, particularly compared with Adderall, but they lasted 3 to 6 hours longer, depending on the measure. Although parent behavior ratings and locomotor activity showed improvements up to 12 hours after single doses of all three drugs, the number of math problems attempted and completed correctly 4 hours after dosing were only robustly increased by Spansules. CONCLUSIONS: Both immediate-release amphetamines demonstrated earlier onset of effects, but dextroamphetamine Spansules showed more sustained effects that were present on a wider range of measures
PMID: 11699800
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 27610
Altered performance on an ocular fixation task in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Gould TD; Bastain TM; Israel ME; Hommer DW; Castellanos FX
BACKGROUND: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common psychiatric disorder without validated objective markers. Eye movement studies may be useful in providing objective criteria for characterizing the disorder. METHODS: We compared 53 children (29 girls) with ADHD to 44 healthy control children (18 girls) on a 21-sec fixation task. Large saccades (> 4 degrees ) away from the fixation point were analyzed. RESULTS: Children with ADHD made more large saccades that interrupted fixation than did control children (p =.001). Mean scores of the ADHD group did not change significantly with subsequent retesting on placebo (p =.11); however, there was poor intrasubject correlation (r =.16). CONCLUSIONS: Both boys and girls with ADHD made significantly more intrusive saccades during fixation than did control subjects, possibly reflecting intrinsic neurologic dysfunction; however, a probable 'floor effect' obviates conclusions about the reliability of this measure
PMID: 11690600
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 27611
Brain imaging of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Giedd JN; Blumenthal J; Molloy E; Castellanos FX
Advances in imaging technology allow unprecedented access to the anatomy and physiology of the living, growing human brain. Anatomical imaging studies of individuals with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) consistently point to involvement of the frontal lobes, basal ganglia, corpus callosum, and cerebellum. Imaging studies of brain physiology also support involvement of right frontal-basal ganglia circuitry with a powerful modulatory influence from the cerebellum. Although not currently of diagnostic utility, further extension and refinement of these findings may offer hope for greater understanding of the core nature of ADHD and possible subtyping to inform treatment interventions
PMID: 11462751
ISSN: 0077-8923
CID: 27613