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ScienceDaily -- Central Michigan University researchers are one step
closer to helping children with
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder improve
their self-control.
A study recently published by CMU psychologist
Mark Reilly, left, along with a team of CMU experimental
psychology graduate students, has brought the researchers one
step closer to understanding and treating impulsivity in
children with ADHD. (Credit: Photo by Robert Barclay, CMU)
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ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed chronic
psychiatric
conditions in today's school-aged children and is based on such
behavioral criteria as impulsivity, hyperactivity, inattention and
learning disabilities.
CMU associate professor of psychology Mark Reilly, along with experimental
psychology graduate students Andrew Fox and Dennis Hand, recently published a
study that investigated impulsivity in two strains of rat. The spontaneously
hypertensive rat has been proposed as a rodent model of ADHD because the rats
have behavioral characteristics similar to those seen in humans diagnosed with
ADHD. In the study, the impulsivity of spontaneously hypertensive rats was
compared to their parent strain without hypertension, Wistar-Kyoto rats, using a
self-control choice task that was originally developed in humans.
The study concluded that the spontaneously hypertensive rats were more
impulsive than the Wistar-Kyoto rats by demonstrating greater preference for
smaller, immediate food rewards over larger, delayed ones. The results suggest
that, like humans, the spontaneously hypertensive rats are hypersensitive to
delayed consequences; they do not wait for better outcomes.
"A good animal model of impulsivity will lead to a better understanding of
ADHD," said Reilly. "This experiment is a more directed look at impulsivity. We
are investigating the behavioral characteristics of the spontaneously
hypertensive rats in order to assist in developing pharmacological and
behavioral therapies to be used in the treatment of ADHD."
Reilly's research strengthens the validity of the spontaneously hypertensive
rat as a model of ADHD. The procedure used in this study may lend itself well to
testing the effects of next generation ADHD drugs and commonly prescribed
psychomotor stimulants such as
methylphenidate, also known as Ritalin.
Adapted from materials provided by Central Michigan University, via Newswise.
Source: ScienceDaily
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