What Are The Causes of ADHD?

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Causes of ADHD



The Causes Of ADHD


The main cause of ADHD is still relatively unknown. Many experts believe that genetics may play a factor in its development. If a parent had ADD or ADHD the child has a seventy percent chance of also having it. In the past, a lot of experts believed that a diet rich in sugar, preservatives and artificial flavorings causes ADHD. However, recent findings have concluded that a person's diet has no bearing on the progression of ADHD.

Studies have shown that the main cause of this disorder is having a less than normal amount of activity in the part of the brain that controls attention. A child with ADHD is usually diagnosed by the age of seven and usually suffers from some form of learning disability as well.


The Causes Of ADHD



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What Are The Myths About The Causes of ADHD?

When a child has ADHD, the parent or guardian of the child can sometimes blame thyself for the problem. They saddle with the guilt for making their child's life miserable, as if they brought on, or are making the symptoms of ADHD worse with their actions.

Parenting, good or bad does not cause or prevent ADHD. A home where tranquillity & peace reign, does not guarantee the absence of ADHD. On the other hand, a neglected and troubled home is not necessarily the reason for one to get ADHD. Although a stable home can help ease the symptoms of some children with ADHD, it will not cure or reverse the problem. The same as, a problematic home can possibly worsen the symptoms of a child with ADHD, but will definitely not bring it on in the first place.

There is yet another factor that could contribute to the guilt of a parent of a child with ADHD. In the past many experts believed that the way of eating has an impact on a child with ADHD. It was said that a diet with a lot of sugar and food coloring can bring about the symptoms of ADHD. As a mother of a child with ADHD I used to deprive my child of all the goodies, because I was confident that without all the sweet stuff, my child wouldn't suffer as much of the ADHD. It took quite a short while for me to realize that instead of making matters better, just the opposite occurred. If the hardships of the ADHD wasn't suffice, I just added more trouble by depriving my child of something all his friends were adoring. When a child is hyper, albeit he does not have ADHD, sugar and sweets can cause him to be more aggressive. But that is not the case with ADHD.

If your child has been diagnosed with ADHD, don't shoulder the responsibility upon yourself. You are not at fault. It's important to learn as much about it as you can, and do everything you can to help your child. That way you will feel blameless.


The Causes Of ADHD

Do You Want To Know What ADHD Is , How It Works and Where It Comes From?

What Causes ADHD?: Understanding What Goes Wrong and Why

Amazon Price: $17.86 (as of 02/15/2012)Buy Now

This book is an excellent review of the current scientific information concerning attention deficit disorder (ADD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

In the first section Joel Niggs begins quite rightly with a discussion about whether ADD and ADHD are illnesses at all, or whether they are no more than labels applied to unruly or underperforming children and adults. This is an important discussion: there are still some who question the existence of these problems, but an increasing body of evidence has confirmed the clinical validity of these syndromes. ADD and ADHD appear to lie on a spectrum running from the highly focused to the seriously disorganized.

In Part Two, "How Does ADHD Work?" he breaks the section into five parts: Neural systems; Attention and arousal; Executive functioning or cognitive control; motivation; and motor control and timing. There seem to be clear deficits in each.

In Part Three, "Where Does ADHD Come From?" Joel examines the multiple pathways that may lead to ADD/ADHD, the genetic influences and both common and uncommon experiential risk factors.

In the Final Part Joel does a masterful job of integrating a large amount of information into a coherent whole.

it is probably the best single reference work on the subject.

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