ADHD, Autism, LD, Intellectual Disability
ADHD, Autism, LD, Intellectual Disability
ADHD, Autism, LD, Intellectual Disability
Referred – hyperactivity
Hyperactive children usually have great difficulty in getting along with their parents because they do
not obey rules.
In general, they are not anxious even though their over activity, restlessness, and distractibility are
frequently interpreted as indications of anxiety. They usually do poorly in school and often show
specific learning disabilities such as difficulties in reading or in learning other basic school subjects.
ADHD occurs with the greatest frequency before age 8 and tends to become less frequent and to
involve briefer episodes thereafter. ADHD has also been found to be comorbid with other disorders
such as oppositional defiant disorder (ODD).
Criteria:
1. Inattention: Six (or more) of the following symptoms have persisted for at least 6 months to
a degree that is inconsistent with developmental level and that negatively impacts directly
on social and academic/occupational activities:
a. Often fails to give close attention to details or makes careless mistakes in schoolwork, at
work, or during other activities
b. Often has difficulty sustaining attention in tasks or play activities
c. Often does not seem to listen when spoken to directly
d. Often does not follow through on instructions and fails to finish schoolwork, chores, or
duties in the workplace
e. Often has difficulty organizing tasks and activities
f. Often avoids, dislikes, or is reluctant to engage in tasks that require sustained mental effort
g. Often loses things necessary for tasks or activities
h. Is often easily distracted by extraneous stimuli (for older adolescents and adults, may
include unrelated thoughts).
i. Is often forgetful in daily activities
2. Hyperactivity and impulsivity: Six (or more) of the following symptoms have persisted for at
least 6 months to a degree that is inconsistent with developmental level and that negatively
impacts directly on social and academic/ occupational activities:
D) There is clear evidence that the symptoms interfere with, or reduce the quality of, social,
academic, or occupational functioning.
E) The symptoms do not occur exclusively during the course of schizophrenia or another
psychotic disorder and are not better explained by another mental disorder.
Causal factors -
The cause or causes of ADHD in children have been much debated. It still remains unclear to
what extent he disorder results from environmental or biological factors, and recent
research points to both genetic and social environmental precursors.
Neurodevelopmental disorders:
The neurodevelopmental disorders are a group of severely disabling conditions that are
among the most difficult to understand and treat.
They are considered to be the result of some structural differences in the brain that are
usually evident at birth or become apparent as the child begins to develop.
Example, autism spectrum disorder, one of the most severe and puzzling disorders occurring
in early childhood.
involves a wide range of problematic behaviors including deficits in language and perceptual and
motor development; defective reality testing; and an inability to function in social situations.
An Absence of Speech Children with autism do not effectively learn by imitation. This dysfunction
might explain their characteristic absence or severely limited use of speech.
If speech is present, it is almost never used to communicate except in the most rudimentary fashion,
such as by saying “yes” in answer to a question or by the use of echolalia—the parrot-like repetition
of a few words.
Echolalia - meaningless repetition of words just spoken by another person, occurring as a symptom of
mental conditions.
A. Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across multiple contexts, as
manifested by the following, currently or by history
1. Deficits in social-emotional reciprocity, ranging
2. Deficits in nonverbal communicative behaviours used for social interaction, ranging
3. Deficits in developing, maintaining, and understanding relationships, ranging
D. Symptoms cause clinically significant impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas
of current functioning.
E. These disturbances are not better explained by intellectual disability (intellectual developmental
disorder) or global developmental delay.
Remember these –
social deficit (children with autism do not show any need for affection or contact with anyone, and
they usually do not even seem to know or care who their parents are.)
intellectual ability (Compared with the performance of other groups of children on cognitive or
intellectual tasks, children with autism often show marked impairment.)
maintaining sameness (preoccupied with and form strong attachments to unusual objects such as
rocks, light switches, or keys. In some instances, the object is so large or bizarre that merely carrying
it around interferes with other activities.)
self – stimulation (repetitive movements as head banging, spinning, and rocking, which may
continue by the hour)
The precise cause or causes of autism are unknown, although most investigators agree that a
fundamental disturbance of the central nervous system is involved.
Many investigators believe that autism begins with some type of inborn defect that impairs an infant’s
perceptual-cognitive functioning—the ability to process incoming stimuli and to relate to the world.
Recent MRI research suggests that abnormalities in the brain anatomy may contribute to the brain
metabolic differences and behavioral phenotype in autism.
The defective genes or damage from radiation or other conditions during prenatal development may play a
significant role in the etiologic picture.
Nevertheless, the exact mode of genetic transmission is not yet understood, but it seems likely that
relatives may also show an increased risk for other cognitive and social deficits that are milder in form
than true autism
Learning disorders are delays in cognitive development in the areas of language, speech, mathematical, or
motor skills that are not necessarily due to any demonstrable physical or neurological defect.
Of these types of problems, the best known and most widely researched are a variety of reading/writing
difficulties known collectively as dyslexia.
The diagnosis of learning disorders is restricted to those cases in which there is clear impairment in school
performance or (if the person is not a student) in daily living activities impairment not due to intellectual
disability or to a pervasive developmental disorder such as autism.
Skill deficits due to ADHD are coded under ADHD. Significantly more boys than girls are diagnosed as
having a learning disorder, but estimates of the extent of this gen- der discrepancy have varied widely from
study to study.
The consequences of various encounters between children with learning disabilities and rigid school
systems can be disastrous to these children’s self-esteem and general psychological well-being, and
research indicates that these effects do not necessarily dissipate after secondary schooling ends but impact
their career adjustment.
Learning disorder difficulties are no longer a significant impediment, an individual may bear, into maturity
and beyond, the scars of many painful school-related episodes of failure.
High levels of general talent and of motivation to overcome the obstacle of a learning disorder sometimes
produce a life of extraordinary achievement.
Estimates suggest that 2 to 10 percent of children have a learning disorder, most often classified as
dyslexia (80 per- cent), with about 30 percent of children with a learning dis- order also suffering from a
comorbid disorder such as ADHD, depression, or anxiety.
Causal factors:
some sort of immaturity, deficiency, or dysregulation limited to those brain functions that
supposedly mediate, for normal children, the cognitive skills that children with learning disorders
cannot efficiently acquire.
Specifically, there appears to be dysfunction in the left hemisphere’s reading network among
people with dyslexia.
region for dyslexia on chromosome 6 has been reported
treatments:
testing treatments for reading disabilities revealed that phonics instruction, which involves
teaching children letter–sound correspondence as well as how to decode and create syllables, is
associated with significant improvements in reading and spelling abilities
suggests that efforts by educators, parents, and researchers in this area are starting to have a
positive effect
Intellectual Disability:
For the diagnosis to apply, these problems must begin before the age of 18.
By definition, any functional equivalent of Intellectual disability that has its onset after age 17 must be
considered a dementia rather than intellectual disability.
Initial diagnoses of intellectual disability occur very frequently at ages 5 to 6 (around the time that
schooling begins for most children), peak at age 15, and drop off sharply after that. For the most part, these
patterns in age of first diagnosis reflect changes in life demands.
When adequate facilities are available for their education, children in this group can usually master
essential school skills and achieve a satisfactory level of socially adaptive behavior. Following the school
years, they usually make a more or less acceptable adjustment in the community and thus lose the identity
of being mentally retarded.
Severe 25 – 40 + Can learn to talk and perform basic self – care but 3%
needs constant supervision.
Severe and profound cases of intellectual disability can usually be readily diagnosed in infancy because of
the presence of obvious physical malformations, grossly delayed development (e.g., in taking solid food),
and other obvious symptoms of abnormality. These individuals show a marked impairment of overall
intellectual functioning.