Maximum downward slope of sleep slow waves as a potential marker of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder clinical phenotypes

ElsevierVolume 156, December 2022, Pages 679-689Journal of Psychiatric ResearchAuthor links open overlay panelHighlights•

EEG analysis of Slow Waves' slope helps differentiate clinical phenotypes of ADHD.

Multiple Anxiety Disorders comorbidity in ADHD is positively associated with the Slow Waves' slope.

Autistic traits in ADHD are positively associated with the Slow Waves' slope.

The Slow Waves' slope in ADHD is negatively associated with multiple syndrome scales at the CBCL.

Associations between the Processing Speed Index (WISC-IV) and the Slow Waves' slope in ADHD are lateralized on the scalp.

AbstractBackground

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a highly heterogeneous diagnostic category, encompassing several endophenotypes and comorbidities, including sleep problems. However, no predictor of clinical long-term trajectories or comorbidity has yet been established. Sleep EEG has been proposed as a potential tool for evaluating the synaptic strength during development, as well as the cortical thickness, which is presumed to be altered in ADHD. We investigated whether the slope of the Slow Waves (SWs), a microstructural parameter of the sleep EEG, was a potential predictive parameter for psychiatric comorbidities and neuropsychological dimensions in ADHD.

Methods

70 children (58 m; 8.76 ± 2.77 y) with ADHD who underwent psychiatric and neurologic evaluations and a standard EEG recording during naps were investigated. After sleep EEG analysis, we grouped the extracted SWs in bins of equal amplitude and then measured the associations, through generalized linear regression, between their maximum downward slopes (MDS) and the individual scores obtained from clinical rating scales.

Results

The presence of Multiple Anxiety Disorders was positively associated with MDS of medium amplitude SWs in temporo-posterior left areas. The Child Behavior Checklist scores showed negative associations in the same areas for small SWs. The presence of autistic traits was positively associated with MDS of high amplitude SWs in bilateral anterior and temporal left areas. The WISC-IV Processing Speed Index showed negative associations with MDS of small-to-medium SWs in anterior and temporal right areas, while positive associations in posterior and temporal left areas.

Conclusions

Consistency of association clusters' localization on the scalp suggests that variations in the local MDS, revealing alterations of local synaptic strength and/or in daytime use of certain cortical circuits, could underlie specific neurodevelopmental trajectories resulting in different ADHD clinical phenotypes.

Keywords

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Sleep

NREM

EEG

Slow waves

Slow wave slope

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© 2022 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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