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Tuesday, November 24, 2009
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ADHD: The Basics

(Page 2)

Impulsivity and Temper Explosions. Even before the "terrible two's," impulsive behavior is often apparent. The toddler may gleefully make erratic and aggressive gestures, such as hair pulling, pinching, and hitting. Temper tantrums, normal in children after age 2, are usually exaggerated and not necessarily linked to a specific negative event in the life of an ADHD child. One of the most painful events a parent may experience is an abrupt and aggressive attack that may occur after cuddling a young ADHD child. Often this reaction seems to be caused not by anger, but by the child's apparent inability to endure overstimulation or displays of physical affection.

Attention and Concentration. ADHD children are usually distracted and made inattentive by an overstimulating environment (such as a large classroom). They are also inattentive when a situation is low-key or dull. Some experts believe that certain parts of the brain in ADHD children may be underactive, so the children fail to be aroused by nonstimulating activities. In contrast, they may exhibit a kind of "super concentration" to a highly stimulating activity (such as a video game or a highly specific interest). Such children may even become over-attentive -- so absorbed in a project that they cannot modify or change the direction of their attention.

Impaired Short-Term Memory. Many experts now believe that an essential feature in ADHD, as well as in learning disabilities, is an impaired working (also called short-term) memory. People with ADHD can't hold groups of sentences and images in their mind long enough to extract organized thoughts. They are not necessarily inattentive. Instead, a patient with ADHD may be unable to remember a full explanation (such as a homework assignment), or unable to complete processes that require remembering sequences, such as model building. In general, children with ADHD are often attracted to activities (television, computer games, or active individual sports) that do not tax the working memory, or produce distractions. Children with ADHD have no differences in long-term memory compared with other children.


Review Date: 03/05/2007
Reviewed By: A.D.A.M. Editorial Team: Greg Juhn, M.T.P.W., David R. Eltz, Kelli A. Stacy. Previously reviewed by Harvey Simon, MD, Editor-in-Chief, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital (12/14/2006).

A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org).
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