ATTENTION-DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER AND WHOLE-BLOOD SEROTONIN LEVELS - EFFECTS OF COMORBIDITY

Citation
Eh. Cook et al., ATTENTION-DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER AND WHOLE-BLOOD SEROTONIN LEVELS - EFFECTS OF COMORBIDITY, Psychiatry research, 57(1), 1995, pp. 13-20
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry
Journal title
ISSN journal
01651781
Volume
57
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
13 - 20
Database
ISI
SICI code
0165-1781(1995)57:1<13:AHDAWS>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Whole-blood serotonin (5-hydrdxytryptamine, 5-HT) levels were measured in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with and without comorbid conduct disorder (CD) or oppositional-defiant di sorder (ODD). It was hypothesized that the whole-blood 5-HT levels of ADHD probands would be significantly correlated with the whole-blood 5 -HT levels of their mothers, Fifty-two children who met DSM-III-R crit eria for ADHD were selected consecutively from an ADHD clinic (47 male s - 35 Caucasians, 10 African-Americans, and 2 Hispanics; 10 females - all Caucasians). Whole-blood 5-HT was assayed by high performance liq uid chromatography and compared between ADHD children with and without comorbid CD or ODD. The familiality of whole-blood 5-HT levels was st udied by Spearman's rank-order correlation, There were no significant age, race, or sex effects, There was no significant difference in whol e-blood 5-HT levels between children with ADHD only (n = 22; 190 +/- 4 5 ng/ml) and ADHD with CD or ODD (n = 30; 212 +/- 67). However, 7 out of 30 (23%) children with ADHD + CD/ODD had whole-blood 5-HT levels > 270 ng/ml, while none of the ADHD-only children had whole-blood 5-HT l evels > 270 ng/ml, a statistically significant difference. Whole-blood 5-HT levels showed significant positive correlations between 36 child ren with disruptive behavior disorders and their biological mothers (r (s) = 0.47). There was no difference in mean levels of whole-blood 5-H T between subgroups of children with ADHD with or without comorbid CD or ODD. However, children with comorbid CD or ODD who had elevated who le-blood 5-HT levels may represent a more clinically homogeneous subgr oup of children with ADHD. As in previous studies of autistic disorder , these data suggest that whole-blood 5-HT levels are familial in ADHD .