Overflow Movements Predict Impaired Response Inhibition in Children with ADHD

Author:

Mostofsky Stewart H.1,Newschaffer Craig J.2,Denckla Martha B.3

Affiliation:

1. Kennedy Krieger Institute, Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

2. Bloomberg School of Public Health Johns Hopkins University

3. Kennedy Krieger Institute Departments of Neurology, Psychiatry, and Pediatrics Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Abstract

Neurologic models proposed to explain mechanisms underlying ADHD have emphasized deficits in response inhibition. Age-inappropriate overflow movements, e.g., mirror movements, are motor signs thought to reflect immaturity in cortical systems involved in automatically (unconsciously, without explicit effort) inhibiting extraneous movement. We investigated the hypothesis that the presence of excessive overflow movements would predict measures of conscious, effortful response inhibition (conflicting and contralateral motor response tests) in children with ADHD. 42 children with ADHD and 30 controls, ages 8 through 12 years, participated. Children with ADHD showed significantly more overflow movements than did controls and made more errors on the conflicting and contralateral motor response tests. Multiple linear regression analysis indicated that overflow movements predicted performance on measures of motor response inhibition. For one of those measures, the contralateral motor response test, there was a significant interaction with diagnosis, such that overflow predicted response inhibition in ADHD but not in controls. The findings suggest that overflow movements, which can be readily observed as part of clinical examination, are more evident in children with ADHD. Positive correlations between measures of overflow movements and measures of response inhibition suggest that closely associated neural mechanisms underlie these deficits and support hypotheses that age-inappropriate overflow reflects immaturity of cortical systems involved in automatic inhibition.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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