Abstract

ADHD is a psychiatric disorder which is characterized by hyperactivity, impulsivity and attention problems. Due to recent findings of microbial involvement in other psychiatric disorders like autism and depression, a role of the gut microbiota in ADHD pathogenesis is assumed but has not yet been investigated. In this study, the gut microbiota of 14 male ADHD patients (mean age: 11.9 yrs.) and 17 male controls (mean age: 13.1 yrs.) was examined via next generation sequencing of 16S rDNA and analyzed for diversity and biomarkers. We found that the microbial diversity (alpha diversity) was significantly decreased in ADHD patients compared to controls (pShannon = 0.036) and that the composition (beta diversity) differed significantly between patients and controls (pANOSIM = 0.033, pADONIS = 0.006, pbetadisper = 0.002). In detail, the bacterial family Prevotellacae was associated with controls, while patients with ADHD showed elevated levels of Bacteroidaceae, and both Neisseriaceae and Neisseria spec. were found as possible biomarkers for juvenile ADHD. Our results point to a possible link of certain microbiota with ADHD, with Neisseria spec. being a very promising ADHD-associated candidate. This finding provides the basis for a systematic, longitudinal assessment of the role of the gut microbiome in ADHD, yielding promising potential for both prevention and therapeutic intervention.

Highlights

  • With a worldwide prevalence of 3–5% [1, 2], ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed psychiatric diseases in childhood and adolescence

  • Four out of fourteen ADHD children did not receive ADHD medication. These patients showed a reduction in alpha diversity comparable to patients who suffered from ADHD but were treated with MPH

  • We observed that boys with ADHD have significantly reduced gut microbial diversity and show differences in microbial composition compared to healthy controls

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Summary

Introduction

With a worldwide prevalence of 3–5% [1, 2], ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed psychiatric diseases in childhood and adolescence. Further information can be found at: https://www.uksh.de/p2n/Information+for +Researchers.html and here https://www.uksh.de/ p2n/Information+for+Researchers/Material+Data +Access+Form.html

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