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Coherence in children with AD/HD and excess alpha power in their EEG

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 06:29 authored by Joel C Robbie, Adam ClarkeAdam Clarke, Robert BarryRobert Barry, Franca Dupuy, Rory McCarthy, Mark Selikowitz
Objective: This study investigated differences in EEG coherence measures between two groups of children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) - one with the more common EEG profile (increased theta), and a group with excess alpha activity as the dominant EEG abnormality. Methods: 26 children (aged 9-13 years) with AD/HD were included in each of the excess-theta and excess-alpha groups, and were age- and sex-matched with 26 control subjects. EEG was recorded from 19 electrode sites during an eyes-closed resting condition. Wave-shape coherence was calculated for eight intrahemispheric and eight interhemispheric electrode pairs, for the delta, theta, alpha and beta bands. Results: In comparison with the controls, the excess-theta AD/HD group had increased theta intrahemispheric coherences at short-medium inter-electrode distances. Frontally, the excess-theta AD/HD group had increased interhemispheric theta and reduced beta coherences. The excess-alpha group primarily showed increased slow wave (delta and theta) intrahemispheric coherence at short-medium inter-electrode distances, and reduced alpha coherence at longer inter-electrode distances, compared with controls. An increase in frontal interhemispheric theta coherence was also found. Conclusions: These results suggest that AD/HD children with excess alpha power have an underlying connectivity dysfunction in the frontal lobes, which is found in common with other subjects with the excess-theta EEG profile. However, a number of qualitative differences exist that could be associated with other aspects of the AD/HD diagnosis. The excess-alpha group appeared to have fewer frontal-lobe abnormalities than the excess-theta AD/HD group. Significance: This is the first study to investigate coherence in AD/HD children who have the atypical profile of increased alpha power in their EEG.

Funding

Validation of a New Conceptual Model of ADHD based on Underlying Central Nervous System Dysfunction

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Robbie, J. C., Clarke, A. R., Barry, R. J., Dupuy, F. E., McCarthy, R. & Selikowitz, M. (2016). Coherence in children with AD/HD and excess alpha power in their EEG. Clinical Neurophysiology, 127 (5), 2161-2166.

Journal title

Clinical Neurophysiology

Volume

127

Issue

5

Pagination

2161-2166

Language

English

RIS ID

105924

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