1 / 19

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Vs Bipolar disorder

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Vs Bipolar disorder. By Marjan Raad, Roshni Shah, Kapil Vij and Martin Bjoernsgaard.

yagil
Download Presentation

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Vs Bipolar disorder

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Vs Bipolar disorder • By Marjan Raad, Roshni Shah, Kapil Vij and Martin Bjoernsgaard

  2. Bipolar disorder and ADHD, or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, are two conditions that are increasingly being diagnosed in children and teens, often together. And interestingly, in children and teens, there are some similarities in the symptoms of the two conditions. But how can a doctor know for sure if the child has bipolar disorder or ADHD? Also, how does the treatment for these two conditions differ?

  3. Key questions • Are they 2 separate illnesses? • Are they 2 overlapping syndromes? • Are they sets of coexisting symptoms? • How often ADHD is an early symptom or warning sign of bipolar disorder?

  4. Diagnositc features • persistent pattern of? • inattention • hyperactivity • impulsivity

  5. Components of Attention • arousal or alertness • external or receptive attention: sensory processing and interpretation • internal or reflective attention • processing attention or selective attention • focus • filtering • inhibition of sensation • external or expressive attention • working memory

  6. ADHD • Children with ADHD are not more active in play • Only when asked to stop or sit still • we see diminished ability to inhibit activity • hyperactive (immaturity) • ability to inhibit response to distractions • inattentive • co-existing condition is depression

  7. ADHD and the brain • Diminished arousal of some regions of the nervous system • Decreased blood flow to the prefrontal cortex and pathways connecting to the limbic system ( caudate and striatum) • PET scans show decreased • glucose metabolism throughout • the brain

  8. Causes of ADHD • Underlying causes of these differences is still unknown, theres is much conflicting data between studies • Strong evidence of genetic component • Predominant theory: catecholamine neurotransmitter dysfunction or imbalance • Diet • Constant over-stimulation

  9. Bipolar Disorder(manic depression)

  10. Features • Episodes of an elevated or agitated mood known as mania • Recurrent explosive, aggressive, irritable behaviours • Aspergers disorder (autism) • In adolescents: borderline personality disorder

  11. Difficulties in diagnosing bipolar • Variability in clinical presentation • Severity, phase of the illness and subtype of bipolar disorder • Highly comorbid with highly psychiatric disorders • Child’s physical and behavioural problems may be expressions of his or her symptoms • Effects of medication

  12. Development of manifestations • Euporia/elation • giggling uncontrollably in class • dancing and laughing at home • finds everything funny and they don’t know why • Decreased need for sleep • up to 2am rearranging furniture, cleaning then awake at 6am dressed and ready for school • child awake at 4am during school vacation • Grandiosity • telling teacher to shut up • child stealing because he feels the rules don’t apply to him • child believing he is a superhero • Hypersexuality • drawing or preoccupied with pictures of naked people

  13. Conditions that may preexist • Learning disabilities = 50% • Oppositional defiant disorder = 40% • (ongoing pattern of anger-guided disobedience, hostility, and defiant behavior toward authority figures) • Anxiety = 35% • Conduct disorder = 35% • (repetitive and persistent pattern of behaviour in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate norms are violated) • Depression = 35% • Tics/tourettes = 7%

  14. Differentiation between ADHD and bipolar • All start in childhood • ADHD starts before age 7 • Pediatric bipolar disorder starts before puberty • Neurobehavioural disorders • often prenatal or perinatal origin

  15. Comparisons

  16. The crossover • 20% of ADHD patients may manifest bipolar disorder • May have moods that change very rapidly for no reason

  17. Thank you for your attention!

More Related