Impulsive Aggression as a Comorbidity of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Children and Adolescents
OBJECTIVE:
This
article examines the characteristics of impulsive aggression (IA) as a
comorbidity in children and adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), focusing on its incidence, impact on ADHD outcomes, need for
timely intervention, and limitations of current treatment practices.
METHODS:
Relevant
literature was retrieved with electronic searches in PubMed and PsycINFO using
the search strategy of "ADHD OR attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder" AND "impulsive aggression OR reactive aggression OR hostile
aggression OR overt aggression" AND "pediatric OR childhood OR
children OR pre-adolescent OR adolescent" with separate searches using
review OR clinical trial as search limits. Key articles published before the
2007 Expert Consensus Report on IA were identified using citation analysis.
RESULTS:
More than
50% of preadolescents with ADHD combined subtype reportedly display clinically
significant aggression, with impulsive aggression being the predominant
subtype. Impulsive aggression is strongly predictive of a highly unfavorable
developmental trajectory characterized by the potential for persistent ADHD,
increasing psychosocial burden, accumulating comorbidities, serious lifelong
functional deficits across a broad range of domains, delinquency/criminality,
and adult antisocial behavior. Impulsive aggression, which triggers peer
rejection and a vicious cycle of escalating dysfunction, may be a key factor in
unfavorable psychosocial outcomes attributed to ADHD. Because severe aggressive
behavior does not remit in many children when treated with primary ADHD therapy
(i.e., stimulants and behavioral therapy), a common practice is to add
medication of a different class to specifically target aggressive behavior.
CONCLUSIONS:
Impulsive
aggression in children and adolescents with ADHD is a serious clinical and
public health problem. Although adjunctive therapy with an aggression-targeted
agent is widely recommended when aggressive behaviors do not remit with primary
ADHD therapy, empirical evidence does not currently support the use of any
specific agent. Randomized controlled trials are needed to identify
aggression-targeted agents with favorable benefit-risk profiles.
- 1 NeuroScience, Inc. , Herndon, Virginia.
- 2 Behavioral Medical Center , Troy, Michigan.
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