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  1. Brain scans reveal two distinct physical subtypes of ADHD

    A new study reveals that attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder actually consists of at least two distinct structural brain subtypes, each with unique physical characteristics and behavioral symptoms. These structural differences suggest that patients may eventually benefit from highly personalized diagnostic and treatment strategies based on their specific biology. The research was published in the journal General Psychiatry.

    The first subtype was characterized by an increase in gray matter across several areas of the brain. When the researchers looked closer, they found that these physical increases were heavily concentrated in the frontal regions and the cerebellum. The frontal regions handle higher-level cognitive functions like working memory, while the cerebellum manages attention and motor coordination.

    Behaviorally, patients in this first subtype struggled the most with severe inattentiveness. The researchers noted that the structural changes in this group were strongly linked to an inability to maintain focus. The physical growth in these specific brain areas appeared to directly impact the patients’ attention spans.

    The second subtype presented a nearly opposite physical reality. Patients in this group showed widespread reductions, or atrophy, in their gray matter compared to the neurotypical control group. This tissue loss was especially prominent in the bilateral cerebellum, the frontal regions, and the hippocampus.

    The hippocampus is a specialized brain structure deeply involved in memory formation, spatial awareness, and internal motivation. In this second subtype, the structural decline in these regions was associated with higher overall disease severity. These patients exhibited both inattentive symptoms and highly hyperactive or impulsive behaviors.

    For those interested, here’s the link to the peer reviewed journal article:

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1136/gpsych-2025-102340

  2. DopamineQuest on

    ADHD seems a lot like CTE, with the gray matter loss and symptoms wise at least

  3. Raider_Scum on

    Is this why im great at jeopardy, but can’t utilize that knowledge for anything serious?

  4. retrosenescent on

    I always thought more grey matter was a good thing, is it not? isn’t grey matter lost with aging?

  5. SleepyFlintlock34 on

    I find it interesting how comparing the ADHD group to the Control group made the variations on brain matter seem statistically insignificant. But by removing the control group and comparing ADHD people to eachother, the difference became clear enough to suggest 2 types.

    Since they have to track the development of the same individuals across time to definetely observe the behaviour in changes, Would that mean that we have to wait around a decade to see the final results of this research?

  6. Definitely interesting. I guess this sort of plays into the idea that in the past we generally thought ADHD was the kids who were super hyperactive and impulsive in schools. Then now we have this huge wave of millennials being diagnosed in their 30s because they didn’t show these signs while in school.

    What we have since learned is that a lot of the kids who we said had ADHD actually had other brain development issues linked to things like fetal alcohol syndrome.

    So does that mean the hyperactive and destructive ADHD is that with brain atrophy and those who went through school bored yet very capable have the second type now being discovered? I guess this is something we need to look much further into.

  7. Sounds like it is time to upgrade your gray matter because one day it may matter. 3030!

  8. Candid_Koala_3602 on

    I have inattentive ADHD and although I absolutely suck at paying attention, I am brilliant at analyzing large data and understanding it quickly. This is very very useful in some professions. I wonder if the greater gray matter is what gives those adhd skip-step insights?

  9. betitallon13 on

    About 40 years ago, ADD and Hyperactivity Disorder were two separate but linked diagnoses. Then they combined them for some reason, even though they’re clearly distinct.

    Maybe they shouldn’t have, as it’s clear treatment is completely different, and now we’ve proven physical differences in the disorders as well.

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