More on ADHD
Author: Dr. Siegfried Othmer
The July issue of Scientific American features an article about
cognitive therapy as an alternative to ADHD drugs. The work proceeds
from the assumption that cognitive deficits in general, and working
memory deficits in particular, are among the defining features
in ADHD, and yet are only marginally addressed with stimulant
medication. According to Rosemary Tannock of the Department of
Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, the effect of stimulants
on working memory is positive but small. Working memory deficits
are thought to underlie a number of disorders beyond ADHD, and
that argues for a direct approach to training working memory.
In a recent paper in the Journal of the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry, Torkel Klingberg of the Karolinska
Institute in Sweden reports that some 12 out of 20 ADHD children
could no longer be diagnosed as ADHD after a mere five-week training
program. Moreover, a follow-up to the $6M Multi-site study of
ADHD found that after two years the behavioral treatment arm was
functioning better than the medication-only arm, a reversal from
the findings after only one year. Moreover, only 8% of the children
in the behavioral arm added medications in the second year. Most
of them continued to rely totally on the benefit they had derived
from the behavioral treatment and the acquired parenting skills.
This story inspires a number of thoughts. First of all, it should
be observed that the Klingberg study was apparently an outcome
study, not a controlled study, and yet the results were welcomed
and accepted. The problem is obvious. How does one deliver fake
cognitive skills training? One does not, and the world moves on
regardless. We should insist on the same liberties with neurofeedback.
It is a training; it is contingent on the active involvement of
the client and the clinician; it should not be attempted blindly.
Secondly, one might wonder why it is that simple techniques such
as training in Digit Span should gain notice in top-ranked journals
while neurofeedback is still knocking at the door. There is only
one sufficient reason: neurofeedback suffers from having been
discovered far too early, so now it is operating under the lingering
handicap of early rejection and neglect. Any new idea that surfaces
within the current ascendancy of cognitive neuroscience does not
necessarily suffer the same fate. At least it is given a hearing.
An ancillary reason is that training in Digit Span does not threaten
the medical edifice, whereas neurofeedback does. All of this is
just to say, once again, that the fault does not lie within ourselves,
dear brutal critic, within our professional community, and least
of all with the inadequacy of either our data or our models. Can
any neurofeedback researcher imagine going to press on ADHD in
2005 with a sample of 20 and a positive outcome in only 60% of
subjects? The folks at the Karolinska Institute should read Tom
Rossiter.
Thirdly, let us probe further into the implications of this finding.
Why should an increase in working memory have such a broad effect
on ADHD? The authors might argue that the defining behaviors in
ADHD could be considered as a secondary consequence of the primary
deficit in working memory. Poor attention follows, and hence distractibility.
I would suggest an alternative view: Good working memory is contingent
on the person’s capacity for the maintenance and persistence of
states, and that in turn is contingent on the brain’s capacity
to sustain specific EEG rhythms for the duration of the mental
process or behavioral objective. The maintenance of continuity
in EEG rhythmic patterns imposes the tightest constraints on the
integrity of brain function. When the brain is trained so that
such constraints are met for the “observable” of working memory,
then they must be adequate for the control and regulation of behavior
in general. Thus any improvement in working memory capacity will
have its favorable fallout for behavioral control in general,
and an improvement in the temporal organization of brain activity,
achieved by any means, will have its favorable fallout for working
memory.
Thus it should have been no surprise that successful neurofeedback
training for ADHD offers the fringe benefit of improved working
memory; hence improved scores on Digit Span, Arithmetic, and Coding;
and hence improved scores on the Wechsler IQ test. This has by
now been convincingly shown by all neurofeedback studies that
have used IQ measures, with the singular exception of the Thomas
Fuchs study, where the average improvement in IQ score was a mere
4 points.
The same could be said for visuo-spatial organization. Improved
organization of brain timing should have beneficial fallout for
visuo-spatial functioning as well as for behavior. As it happens,
neurofeedback training has its most significant effect on Picture
Arrangement and Picture Completion on the Wechsler. When all is
said and done, no subtest of the Wechsler remains untouched by
neurofeedback.
The above makes the case for the general model of disregulation
in ADHD, and for the near universal utility of training the brain
in the timing and frequency domains. The generalized model must
come to terms, however, with the particularity we sometimes see
in the deficits of ADHD children. A generalized model would lead
one to expect slippage on all of the relevant dimensions of cognitive
performance and behavioral control, whereas in many cases the
deficits can be quite narrowly delineated. And on the remediation
side, one would then expect that neurofeedback would help fairly
uniformly across the board. When we look at individual responses,
however, there is considerable variability.
We may argue successfully that the generalized disregulation
model is the best starting point for the discussion of neurofeedback,
but matters can’t end there. The observed variability in outcomes
means that we must also come to terms with the more conventional
neuropsychological categories where matters appear to differentiate.
A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the recent treatment of ADHD
in the Journal Biological Psychiatry. There three broad categories
were identified as candidates for comprehensive models of core
deficits in ADHD: 1) an executive function (EF) deficit model;
2) a cognitive-energetic (arousal deficit) model; and 3) a motivational
(reward-deficit) model. The first of these has the advantage of
being the most accessible to quantification; it has been the most
thoroughly explored; it has the benefit of august sponsorship
(Barkley); and it offers the cleanest differentiation with respect
to the clinical “near neighbors” of Conduct Disorder and Oppositional-Defiant
Disorder.
So I took another look at the report by Nigg et al on three different
studies using a variety of Executive Function tests. The averaged
results are shown in Figure 1. The Figure illustrates the number
of individuals exhibiting from zero to five deficits on executive
function tasks for normals and ADHD children. The criterion for
deficit was functioning beyond the ninetieth percentile of the
normal population. Since the data refer to 100 subjects, the numbers
can be read as percentages. Remarkably, some 21 percent of ADHD
children showed no executive function deficit at all. And one
quarter of both groups exhibited one deficit in the five tests.
If instead one plots the cumulative score (all those scoring
equal to or more than a particular number of deficits from one
to five) matters are somewhat better (see Figure 2). Still, half
of normals show at least one EF deficit. Improved positive predictive
power (through raising the bar on the number of deficits qualifying
a child as ADHD) is purchased only at the cost of diminished negative
predictive power (those left out are only normals). For all the
effort at characterization there seems to be only a modest benefit.
Certainly this cannot be justified in support of proper diagnosis,
and EF cannot be considered a defining deficit in ADHD except
possibly for a subgroup (where that would be true by definition).
As already suggested previously, we need not be caught up in
this dilemma at all, since it is not necessary for us to do homage
at the way station of ADHD diagnosis. The ground truth is one
of considerable heterogeneity in performance, even within what
might come to be called the “executive function” subtype of ADHD.
For us the question reduces to an operational one: must we target
the executive function deficits specifically with neurofeedback,
or will they all resolve with a “general self-regulation strategy.”
If the latter were the case, then the general disregulation model
would be supported, even in the face of the diversity of clinical
presentations. But to prove the point, there is no way around
our needing to assess broadly with respect to executive function
deficits.
The tests at issue include the “Stop Signal Reaction Time” (SSRT)
test described two weeks ago; Reaction Time Variability; the Stroop;
the CPT; and the Trailmaking Test. The last of these was at the
low end in terms of predictive power, so we’ll drop it from the
discussion. We have prior experience with the Stroop, and found
efficacy of NF in the early work with David Kaiser. Reaction Time
Variability is part of the CPT. So if one were to add the “SSRT”
and the Stroop to the CRT evaluation, most of the bases would
be covered.
The 1991 Marks/Othmer study showed clear evidence that the neurofeedback
impacted favorably on both arousal-related and motivational dimensions,
as well as on emotional regulation generally. The significance
of that early study was that all such results were traceable to
essentially a single protocol (hence motivating the generalized
self-regulation model). With the proliferation of training sites
that has since occurred, and with the tailoring of the protocol
to individual needs that is now possible, we may well have surmounted
the high variability in outcomes found in that early work. The
addition of frontal sites has improved our access to the arousal
and affective dimension of ADHD. The addition of pre-frontal training
has improved our impact on executive function. And the inclusion
of parietal training has improved our impact on sensory processing
and sensory integration issues.
Does such proliferation of protocols undermine the general disregulation
model? Perhaps not. If it can be proved that with such more comprehensive
tools we can achieve more uniformly successful outcomes, then
one may consider the general disregulation model to be viable
even in the face of the obvious heterogeneity in clinical presentation.
After all, we are talking about essentially the same protocol
applied at various site pairs, which apparently gives us differential
access to certain parts of the regulatory networks.
But we already know that the general disregulation model is not
the whole picture. It cannot accommodate specific learning disabilities,
as one example. So we will just have to come to terms with both
realities, both in the conceptual realm and in actual practice.
Figure 1. Distribution of Executive Function deficits for normals
and ADHDs, ranging from zero to five.

Figure 2. Partial sums of Executive Function deficits with respect
to a minimum, plotted as a function of the minimum number of deficits.

Dr. Siegfried Othmer
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