Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Influence of Stimulant Medication on Brain Processes for Decision Making in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
The goal of this trial is to investigate the cognitive- and brain-mechanisms underlying decision making (DM) and learning in young adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) as well as the modulation of task-related and task-independent brain activation by methylphenidate. The study aims at using a double-blinded, placebo controlled, cross-over, withdrawal design to study the effects of ADHD and methylphenidate in both a behavioural study investigating cognitive effects on decision making and instrumental learning, and a functional MRI (fMRI) study investigating the effects on brain mechanisms during decision making alone. A secondary objective of the trial is to measure the effect of adult ADHD and methylphenidate on cerebral perfusion. This will be done through applying a novel arterial spin labelling MRI-technique on the participants in the fMRI arm of the study.
The immediate scientific goal of this trial is to investigate the cognitive- and
brain-mechanisms underlying Decision Making (DM) and instrumental learning in young adults
with ADHD as well as the modulation of task-related and task-independent brain activation by
MPH. In a more applied perspective, the investigators hope this trial will contribute to the
development of tools for improved diagnosis and treatment monitoring of ADHD. Diagnostic
tools should be based on the understanding of cognitive and brain mechanisms contributing to
the symptom manifestation of ADHD. The study aims at using a double-blinded, placebo
controlled cross-over withdrawal design to study the effects of ADHD and MPH in both a
behavioural study investigating cognitive effects on DM and instrumental learning, and an
fMRI study investigating the effects on brain mechanisms during DM alone. The results of the
behavioural DM task from the fMRI experiment will be pooled with the data from the
behavioural study to achieve higher statistical power in the analysis of the behavioural
data.
A distinctive characteristic of this proposal is to gain insight into differences between
ADHD-patients and healthy controls and the effects of methylphenidate (MPH) medication with
an approach termed "computational psychiatry" (Maia and Frank, 2011). In this approach, the
investigators apply mathematical models of cognition to observed behaviour in order to
derive latent decision variables characterizing the DM- and instrumental learning processes.
When combined with neuroimaging methods, computational models allow identification of
differences in affective and cognitive processes together with the neurobiological processes
that underlie these differences (Frank et al., 2004). Such insights should be the foundation
of new tools for diagnosis and therapeutic treatment of ADHD.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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