2011
DOI: 10.1007/s00787-011-0188-y
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Diurnal variations in arousal: a naturalistic heart rate study in children with ADHD

Abstract: Previous studies suggest an altered circadian regulation of arousal in children with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) as measured by activity, circadian preference, and sleep-wake patterns.Although heart rate is an important measure to evaluate arousal profiles, to date it is unknown whether 24-hour heart rate patterns differentiate between children with and without ADHD.In this study, 24-hour heart rate data were collected in 30 non-medicated children with ADHD (aged 6-11) and 30 sex-, class-, … Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Interestingly, the other study revealed tachycardia in children with ADHD in comparison with controls; importantly, this tachycardia was observed during day and night. Nocturnal tachycardia in this group could not be explained by nocturnal activity levels or comorbid externalizing/internalizing problems (Imeraj et al, 2011). These conclusions are consistent with our findings of tachycardia in the children suffering from ADHD-combined type (Tonhajzerova et al, 2009a).…”
Section: Attention Deficit/hyperactivity Disorder (Adhd)supporting
confidence: 82%
“…Interestingly, the other study revealed tachycardia in children with ADHD in comparison with controls; importantly, this tachycardia was observed during day and night. Nocturnal tachycardia in this group could not be explained by nocturnal activity levels or comorbid externalizing/internalizing problems (Imeraj et al, 2011). These conclusions are consistent with our findings of tachycardia in the children suffering from ADHD-combined type (Tonhajzerova et al, 2009a).…”
Section: Attention Deficit/hyperactivity Disorder (Adhd)supporting
confidence: 82%
“…As hyperactivity in the ADHD group was only obvious during daytime and not during nighttime periods, the authors suggested that -along with contextual factors-circadian rhythms might play a role in these differential activity patterns. Similar findings were obtained in a larger sample by Imeraj et al (2011). Moreover, their finding of higher daytime activity levelsespecially during noon and early afternoon hours-confirmed an important role for time of day effects in addition to environmental conditions in the expression of (afternoon) problem behavior in ADHD.…”
Section: <Insert Table 1 About Here>supporting
confidence: 75%
“…Animal studies have found that stimulants prolong action potential duration and resting membrane potential in sinoatrial cells (Aileru and Carpentier 1996), affect action-potential repolarization in ventricular myocytes (Casis et al 2000), affect cell membranes in the myocardium (Henderson and Fischer 1995), and have dose-related structural effects on capillary endothelial cells (Bahcelioglu et al 2009). Drug-näive children with ADHD have higher heart rates than controls (Huang and Tsai 2011;Imeraj et al 2011;Buchhorn et al 2012a) and reduced heart rate variability (HRV), which is normalized by methylphenidate (Buchhorn et al 2012b).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%