4.3 Article

The Role of Sleep in the Relationship Between ADHD Symptoms and Stop Signal Task Performance

Journal

JOURNAL OF ATTENTION DISORDERS
Volume 25, Issue 13, Pages 1881-1894

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1087054720943290

Keywords

attention; hyperactivity; ADHD; sleep; inhibition; Bayes

Funding

  1. National Medical Health and Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [1008522, 1065895]
  2. Collier Foundation
  3. Murdoch Children's Research Institute
  4. Royal Children's Hospital
  5. Royal Children's Hospital Foundation
  6. Department of Paediatrics at The University of Melbourne
  7. Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program
  8. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1065895] Funding Source: NHMRC

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The study revealed that ADHD symptoms are associated with sleep problems and inhibition performance, with sleep problems having a more prominent impact on inhibition performance. Therefore, assessment and treatment of children with manifestations of ADHD should take into consideration the influence of sleep problems.
Background:ADHD commonly occurs with sleep problems and secondary cognitive impairments such as inhibitory control. Sleep problems may explain attentional lapses and inhibition performance variability in children with ADHD. This study applied Bayesian analyses to examine the relationship between ADHD symptoms, sleep problems, and inhibition.Methods:Participants included 73 children with ADHD and 73 non-ADHD controls, aged 10.5 to 13.5 years. The Stop Signal Task measured inhibition. Sleep problems were measured with the Adolescent Sleep Wake Scale and parent-report.Results:ADHD symptoms are associated with sleep problems and reaction time variability, however, sleep problems accounted for more variance in inhibition performance than both hyperactive and inattentive symptoms.Conclusion:Sleep problems account for inhibition performance over and above ADHD symptom severity in children with and without ADHD diagnoses. This suggests clinical utility in assessing sleep in children with manifestations of ADHD, and interventions targeting sleep problems concurrently with behavioral symptoms. This further adds to the discussion on overdiagnosis of ADHD due to behavioral presentations of underlying sleep disorders. Treatment for phenotypes of ADHD could be enhanced by targeting sleep problems, in addition to inhibition deficits and attentional lapses.

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