Abstract

Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neuropsychological disorder that causes inattentiveness, hyperactivity, and impulsiveness in patients. Ventral striatal hypo-responsiveness, orbitofrontal cortex, and dopaminergic status in the brain are related to the pathogenesis of ADHD. Reinforcement tasks by monetary incentive delay (MID) was shown to produce more responsiveness in patients. In this study, we reviewed how reinforcement interventions and compensatory mechanisms affect the behavior of ADHD patients. This systematic review was undertaken as per the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis guidelines, and PubMed database was used for literature search.The quality appraisal was completed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale, and nine case-control studies were included in this systematic review. A total of 976 participants were included, with 493 cases and 330 controls. The studies included discuss reinforcement, attention networks, and compensatory mechanisms. Our review concludes that reinforcement improves responsiveness to gain and loss of rewards in ADHD patients. Reward processing is selectively associated with the salience network. While ADHD, predominantly the inattentive type, is insensitive to stimuli, ADHD combined type and controls showed similar responsiveness. The right visual cortex may also be related to compensatory mechanisms in ADHD. As we only included case-control studies from the last eight years, in the English language, we might have missed some relevant studies related to this research. Because the included studies have a relatively small sample size, we recommend future studies to explore larger cohorts of patients to improve the reliability of findings pertinent to this field.

Highlights

  • This review focuses on exploring the mechanisms by which Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) patients respond to applied reinforcement in the form of monetary incentive tasks across the different subtypes of ADHD, compensatory mechanisms involved, and how attention and execution networks function in ADHD patients that make them perform in a different way than normally developing individuals

  • A total of 21 relevant studies were assessed for quality appraisal and nine moderate-to-high quality case-control studies were included in this systematic review

  • The nine articles included here were published in peer-reviewed journals from 2012 to 2020 and discussed reinforcement and reward processing in patients with ADHD and the subtypes of ADHD

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Summary

Introduction

ADHD is a heterogeneous group of neurodevelopmental disorders, defined and diagnosed with the help of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-MD) It is the most prevalent psychiatric disorder in adolescents, affecting 5.29% of adolescent children worldwide and 9.4% of children in the United States [2,3,4,5]. Patients with ADHD have a preference for minor prompt rewards over major, belated rewards, make more unsound decisions to attain rewards, and are exceptionally responsive to positive reinforcement [6,7,8]

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