Neurobiological Pathophysiology of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
10.12701/yujm.2000.17.2.108
- Author:
Hyung Bae PARK
;
Yeol JOO
- Publication Type:Review
- Keywords:
Attention dificit hyperactivity disorder;
Pathophysiology;
Dopamine;
Prefrontal circuit
- MeSH:
Administration, Oral;
Animals;
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity*;
Autoreceptors;
Catecholamines;
Diffusion;
Dopamine;
Dopamine Agents;
Executive Function;
Ganglia;
Humans;
Molecular Biology;
Neuroimaging;
Signal-To-Noise Ratio;
Synaptic Transmission
- From:Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine
2000;17(2):108-122
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Models of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder(ADHD) that have proposed a hypodopaminergic state resulting in hypofunction of the prefrontal circuitry have assumed a unitary dopamine system, which largely ignores the distinct functional differences between mesocortical dopamine system and nigrostriatal dopamine system. PURPOSE: The author's goal was to develop a pathophysiological model for ADHD with greater explanotory power than dopaminergic hypofunction hypothesis in prefronal circuitry. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Published clinical findings on ADHD were integrated with data from genetic, pharmacological, neuroimaging studies in human and animals. RESULTS: Molecular genetic studies suggest that three genes may increase the susceptibility to ADHD. The three candidate genes associated with ADHD are each involved in dopaminergic function, and this consistent with the neurobiologic studies implicating catecholamines in the etiology of ADHD. Pharmacological data also provide compelling support for dopamine and noradrenergic hypothesis of ADHD. Neuroimaging studies lend substantial support for the hypothesis that right-sided abnormalities of prefrontal-basal ganglia circuit would be found in ADHD. CONCLUSIONS: The present hypothesis takes advantage of the major differences between the two pertinent dopamine systems. Mesocortical dopamine system, which largely lacks inhibitory autoreceptors, is ideally positioned to regulate cortical inputs, thus improving the signal-to-noise ratio for biologically valued signals. In this circuit, therapeutic doses of stimulants are hypothesized to increase postsynaptic dopamine effects and enhance executive functions. By contrast, symptoms of hyperactivity/impulsivity in ADHD are hypothesized to be associated with relative overactivity of nigrostriatal circuit. This nigrostriatal circuit is tightly regulated by inhibitory autoreceptoors as well as by long distance feedback from the cortex, and slow diffusion of therapeutic doses of stimulant via oral administration is hypothesized to produce a net inhibition of dopaminergic neurotransmission and improves hyperactivity.