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What is ADHD? Is it a Type of LD?
Dr. Larry Silver, January 2002
Larry Silver, M.D., will be keynoting on
Tuesday at our fall conference. Plan to attend the conference and
hear what he has to say.
Many Parents and educational professionals confuse ADHD and LD. Is
ADHD a form of LD? No. Each is distinctive neurologically-based
disorder. Each is recognized and diagnosed differently. Each is
treated in a different way. The treatment for ADHD will not correct
an LD. The treatment for LD will not help ADHD. Of importance is that
about 30 to 40% of individuals with LD will also have ADHD. Thus, if
you find one problem it is important to look for the other.
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is a neurologically-based
disorder caused by a deficiency of a specific neurotransmitter (norepinephrine
and/or its precursors, dopa and dopamine) in a specific set of brain
circuits. Depending on which areas of these circuits are involved,
the individual might be hyperactive, distractive, or impulsive.
Hyperactivity might involve up and down, fidgety, squirmy, wiggly
behavior or might show only as fidgety hand movements. The
distractibility might be to sound inputs, visual inputs, and/or to
internal thoughts. Impulsivity might involve speaking before
thinking, thus interrupting or calling out or might involve acting
before thinking.
There are many reasons for these three behaviors, including anxiety
or depression. Thus the diagnosis is not easy. There are no formal
tests. The pattern of clinical history is used. If the hyperactivity,
distractivity, and/or impulsivity started at a certain time (e.g.
until third grade) or occurs only in specific settings (e.g., only at
school or only when doing homework), the probable cause is anxiety or
depression. ADHD is present at birth. Thus the history will be
chronic and pervasive. These behaviors will have been present since
early life and will exist in most of these behaviors that establishes
the diagnosis.
The treatment involves raising the level of the deficient
neurotransmitter. There are several medications that will accomplish
this. One group works by increasing the production of the transmitter
(Ritalin, dextroampetamine, Adderall). The second group works by
decreasing the breakdown of this transmitter; thus, whatever is
produced stays around longer (imipramine, desipramine, nortriptyline).
Learning Disabilities are caused by "faulty wiring" in the cortex of
the brain. The result is difficulty processing information. These
processing problems might involve language, motor, cognitive, or
executive functioning problems. The result will be problems with
language, motor activity, reading, writing, math, organization, or
other higher level tasks. Which disabilities an individual has will
depend on the areas involved. When they will appear will depend on
when the area of the brain that is wired differently begins to
function.
Treatment of learning disabilities involves rehabilitation efforts.
We can not get rid of the faulty wiring; we have to help the
individual learn how to learn with the disabilities. These
interventions include remedial interventions, teaching compensatory
strategies, and accommodations.
Thus, ADHD makes the individuals less available for learning because
of the activity level, inattention, and/or impulsivity. LD makes the
individual unable to learn in the normal way, requiring intervention
strategies to learn how to learn. Medication will not help minimize
the impact of LD. Special education services will not help minimize
the impact of ADHD. Each requires proper recognition and specific
treatments. |