Power spectral analysis (PSA) of heart-rate variations has recently proved a useful tool in evaluating cardiovascular autonomic activity. It offers the possibility of examining both the functioning of parasympathetic and sympathetic pathways through breakdown into two frequency bands, and of their effects on heart-rate cyclic variability. We applied an autoregressive model for PSA to study overall autonomic tone in 20 male age-matched control subjects and 53 insulin-dependent (type I) diabetic subjects, subdivided into three groups of 20, 15, and 18, each group presenting different degrees of autonomic involvement. We found that: 1) power spectrum density (PSD) values at high-frequency bands (parasympathetic dependent) were similar in diabetic subjects without cardiac autonomic neuropathy (CAN) and in control subjects, but differed significantly from diabetic subjects with mild CAN and severe CAN, both standing and lying; 2) PSD values at low frequency (mainly sympathetic dependent) were similar, or slightly different, in diabetic subjects without CAN and in control subjects, but differed significantly from diabetic subjects with mild and severe CAN, both standing and lying; 3) as an expression of parasympathetic versus sympathetic coherence, correlations, both standing and lying, existed between PSD values at low- and high-frequency bands in control and diabetic subjects without CAN, but not in diabetic subjects with CAN; and 4) different degrees of correlation characterized the PSD values of high and low frequencies versus traditional cardiovascular test values in the diabetic subjects. The best correlation was between PSD low-frequency values and the lying-to-standing maneuver.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Although Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) has been related to an increased risk for behavioral addictions, the relationship between ADHD and Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) is still debated. The aim of this study is to address this topic by exploring the prevalence of IGD in a consecutive sample of ADHD youth, compared to a normal control group, and by assessing selected psychopathological and cognitive features in ADHD patients with and without IGD. One hundred and eight patients with ADHD (mean age 11.7 ± 2.6 years, 96 males) and 147 normal controls (NC) (mean age 13.9 ± 3.0 years, 114 males) were included in the study and received structured measures for IGD. In the ADHD group, 44% of the sample were above the IGD cut-off, compared to 9.5% in the NC group. ADHD patients with IGD presented with greater severity and impairment, more severe ADHD symptomatology, more internalizing symptoms, particularly withdrawal/depression and socialization problems, and more prominence of addiction and evasion dimensions. A binary logistic regression showed that the degree of inattention presented a greater weight in determining IGD. These findings may be helpful for identifying, among ADHD patients, those at higher risk for developing a superimposed IGD.
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