Medication vs. Movement in ADHD: Interaction Between Medication and Physical Activity on Neurocognitive Functioning
Beverly-Ann Hoy, Michelle Bi, Matthew Lam, Androu Abdalmalak, Barbara Fenesi

TL;DR
The study found that unmedicated children with ADHD benefit from movement during tasks, while medicated children do not.
Contribution
It reveals how medication status interacts with physical activity to affect brain activation and inhibitory control in ADHD children.
Findings
Unmedicated ADHD children showed increased DLPFC activation during movement.
Medicated ADHD children did not benefit from movement in terms of brain activation or task performance.
Movement improved inhibitory control in unmedicated ADHD children but not in medicated ones.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Movement during attention-demanding tasks may help compensate for cortical under-arousal in pediatric ADHD patients. However, the influence of medication during movement is unknown. This study assessed the impact of concurrent movement during executive functioning tasks on dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) activation and inhibitory control, with a particular focus on the influence of medication status. Methods: Twenty-six children with ADHD (15 medicated; 11 unmedicated) and 24 children without ADHD performed a Stroop task under two conditions: while remaining seated (Stationary condition) and while pedalling on a desk cycle (Movement condition). Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) was used to measure changes in oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin levels in the left DLPFC. Results: Sixty-four percent of unmedicated children with ADHD showed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Children's Physical and Motor Development
