Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Hypertension in kids linked to ADHD learning problems

A new study, published today in the journal Pediatrics, also finds “that children with hypertension are more likely to have ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder),” says Heather R. Adams, assistant professor of neurology and pediatrics at the University of Rochester.

“Although retrospective, this work adds to the growing evidence of an association between hypertension and cognitive function. With 4 percent of children now estimated to have hypertension, the need to understand this potential connection is incredibly important.”

Among the study’s 201 patients, all of whom had been referred to a pediatric hypertension clinic at University of Rochester Medical Center’s Golisano Children’s Hospital, 101 actually had hypertension, or sustained high blood pressure, determined by 24-hour ambulatory monitoring or monitoring by a school nurse or at home.

Overall, 18 percent of the children had learning disabilities, well above the general population’s rate of 5 percent. But the percentage among those without hypertension was closer to 9 percent, and among those with hypertension, the rate jumped to 28 percent.

All of the children were between 10- and 18-years-old, and the children’s learning disability and ADHD diagnoses were reported by parents.

The study is part of a series of hypertension studies by Golisano Children’s Hospital researchers, led by principal investigator Marc Lande, a pediatric nephrologist, but it was the first that included children with ADHD. Previous studies excluded them because ADHD medications can increase blood pressure.

Researchers included them this time because, although it is possible that some of the children’s hypertension was caused by medications, it is also possible that the higher rate of ADHD among children with hypertension is a reflection of neurocognitive problems caused by hypertension.

Twenty percent of the children with hypertension had ADHD, only 7 percent of those without hypertension had ADHD among the study participants.

Even when ADHD was factored out of the analyses, there was still a higher rate of learning disabilities in the hypertensive, compared to the nonhypertensive group of children

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