Hoge bloeddruk en ADHD?
Uit een kleine Amerikaanse studie blijkt dat kinderen met hoge bloeddruk wel vier keer meer kans hebben op leerproblemen en ADHD als kinderen met gewone bloeddruk. 201 kinderen
in de leeftijd van 10-18 jaar, met hoge bloeddruk werden gevolgd. Bij controle bleek dat slechts 100 kinderen daadwerkelijk hoge bloeddruk had. Van deze 100 kinderen met echt hoge bloeddruk had 40% leerproblemen en/of
ADHD (20% ADHD en 28% leerproblemen).
Greater Risk Of Learning/Attention Problems In Hypertensive Children
Children who have high blood pressure are more likely to have learning disabilities and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) than children who are not hypertensive. They are also more likely to have a higher body mass index (BMI), an indicator of body fat.
The University of Rochester Medical Center study, which was presented in abstract form at the Pediatric Academic Society meeting today in Baltimore, shows that children with hypertension are four times as likely to have a learning disability and/or ADHD.
"Clinicians should be aware that these conditions commonly occur together," said Marc Lande, M.D., a pediatric nephrologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center and author of the abstract. "More studies investigating the potential association between hypertension and neurocognitive deficits are definitely
needed."
Lande authored a paper in the Journal of Pediatrics earlier this year that showed children with high blood pressure are not as good at complicated, goal-directed tasks, have more working memory problems and are not as adept at planning as their peers without hypertension. If they are both hypertensive and obese, they are also more likely to have anxiety and
depression.
The new study followed 201 children 10 to 18 years old who were referred to specialists for high blood pressure. Of those, 100 were diagnosed with hypertension while 101 were determined to either not have hypertension or to have white coat high blood pressure (or normal blood pressure that shoots up when nervous in an exam room). Almost 28 percent of children with hypertension had a learning disability and 20 percent had ADHD. Some of those children had both a learning disability and ADHD, so in total, 40 percent of children with hypertension had a learning disability and/or ADHD.
Dr. Lande points out, "This apparent association between hypertension and learning problems is particularly important in light of the recent increase in hypertension in children in this country that has occurred as a result of the dramatic rise in obesity."
Source:
Heather Hare
University of Rochester Medical Center (Juni
2009)