Showing posts with label AIDS Disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIDS Disease. Show all posts

Thursday, April 7, 2011

What is the causes ADHD?

Experts believe ADHD is partly due to an imbalance of chemicals that transmit messages to the brain and partly because the areas of the brain that affect behaviour aren’t working properly.

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The main factors are:

  1. The child’s temperament, which affects attitude and personality.
  2. A genetic link - recent studies show that 80-90 per cent of the risk for ADHD is genetic. This is why ADHD tends to run in families.
  3. Brain injury, either pre-birth or due to trauma during birth (this is a small percentage of cases).

Certain aspects of the family environment are found more often in children with ADHD, eg family stress. It isn’t clear if these factors can cause ADHD. They may just increase the likelihood that ADHD will develop in a child who is already genetically prone to it.

ADHD is not caused by:

Poor parenting. Parenting styles can affect your child’s behaviour though and, in turn, can affect your ability to manage difficult behaviour.
Diet, although dietary supplements such as fish oil may help.

What are the symptoms of AIDS?

There are three core symptoms of ADHD:

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  1. Hyperactivity
  2. Impulsivity
  3. Inattention.

There is a list of different behaviours within these groups.

To get a diagnosis of ADHD under either ICD-10 or DSM-IV-TR, symptoms must:

  • Have been present for at least six months

  • Have developed before the age of seven.

  • Be greater than expected for the child’s age and intelligence (ie more than just being a busy toddler)

  • Have a significant negative impact in at least two settings, for example at home, work, school. Sometimes parents don’t feel there’s a problem at home, either because they don’t have other children to compare the ADHD child to, or because they’ve adjusted to their child’s behaviour and are handling it well.

Your child must also not have another disorder, eg mood, anxiety or personality, that could cause the same symptoms.

In general, boys tend to show more symptoms of hyperactivity and girls tend to show more symptoms of inattention.

In adults, symptoms are very similar but the hyperactivity tends to become a feeling of restlessness, fidgeting, difficulty in relaxing or feeling ‘on edge’ all the time.

There are Different ways of classifying ADHD

A doctor diagnoses ADHD by looking at your child's symptoms. There are two different ways to assess symptoms.

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DSM-IV

The American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (known as DSM-IV-TR) classifies ADHD in three ways, based on the child’s behaviour.

The symptoms are split into two categories: inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity. A doctor will look at how many symptoms your child has in each category.

  • ADHD combined type: this is the most common type: and means the child has six or more symptoms in each category.

  • ADHD predominantly inattentive type: this means the child has six or more inattention symptoms but fewer than six hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms.

  • ADHD predominantly hyperactive-impulsive type: this is the least common type and means that the child has six or more hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms but fewer than six inattention symptoms

What is ADHD?

ADHD stands for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. It’s thought to be caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain that affects the parts controlling attention, concentration and impulsivity.

This means a child’s behaviour can be anything from being ‘very dreamy’ (or unable to pay attention) through to being ‘always on the go’ (or hyperactive).

A person with ADHD has difficulty filtering out all the information coming into his brain, so he’s easily distracted, tends to respond before he has considered things properly and doesn’t know when to stop.

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A child with ADHD will take longer to settle and concentrate than a child without, and may have problems following instructions.

Children with ADHD often have above-average intelligence but find it hard to learn. They often also have problems socialising.

The condition is long term and can continue through adult life. There is a genetic component, and children with ADHD often have relatives (frequently male) with ADHD.

It isn’t caused by bad parenting, but a child’s surroundings and support can affect how severe the symptoms are and how well he can learn to deal with them.