Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume 47, Issue 10 , Pages 1141-1150, October 2008

fMRI of Intrasubject Variability in ADHD: Anomalous Premotor Activity With Prefrontal Compensation

Drs. Suskauer, Denckla, Pekar, and Mostofsky are with the Kennedy Krieger Institute, Mr. Simmonds is with the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and Dr. Caffo is with the Department of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Accepted 14 May 2008.

Disclosures: Dr. Pekar is Manager of the F.M. Kirby Research Center for Functional Brain Imaging which receives research support from Philips Medical Systems, manufacturer of the scanner used in this study. The other authors report no conflicts of interest.

Abstract 

Objective

Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) consistently display increased intrasubject variability (ISV) in response time across varying tasks, signifying inefficiency of response preparation compared to typically developing (TD) children. Children with ADHD also demonstrate impaired response inhibition; inhibitory deficits correlate with ISV, suggesting that similar brain circuits may underlie both processes. To better understand the neural mechanisms underlying increased ISV and inhibitory deficits in children with ADHD, functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to examine the neural correlates of ISV during Go/No-go task performance.

Method

Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to study 25 children with ADHD and 25 TD children ages 8 to 13 years performing a simplified Go/No-go task. Brain-behavior correlations were examined between functional magnetic resonance imaging activation and ISV within and between groups.

Results

For TD children, increased rostral supplementary motor area (pre-supplementary motor area) activation during No-go events was associated with less ISV, whereas the reverse was true for children with ADHD for whom increased pre-supplementary motor area activation was associated with more ISV. In contrast, children with ADHD with less ISV showed greater prefrontal activation, whereas TD children with more prefrontal activation demonstrated more ISV.

Conclusions

These findings add to evidence that dysfunction of premotor systems may contribute to increased variability and impaired response inhibition in children with ADHD and that compensatory strategies eliciting increased cognitive control may improve function. However, recruitment of prefrontal resources as a compensatory mechanism for motor task performance may preclude the use of those prefrontal resources for higher order, more novel executive functions with which children with ADHD often struggle.

Key Words:  attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder , intrasubject variability , response inhibition

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 This study was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke: K02NS04485 (S.M.), R01NS047781 (S.M.); the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development: K12HD001097 (S.S.), P30HD24061 (Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Center); and Johns Hopkins General Clinical Research Center M01RR00052.

PII: S0890-8567(08)60099-4

doi:10.1097/CHI.0b013e3181825b1f

Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume 47, Issue 10 , Pages 1141-1150, October 2008