Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is characterized by damage of neurodevelopment, manifested in the form of excessive inattention and/or hyperactivity and impulsivity, as well as a lack of emotional self-control and motivation [1]. It is a chronic disorder of childhood onset and one of the most common psychiatric disorders worldwide within this stage of life (5–6%) [2]. During the last 40 years we have seen that a significant proportion of the affected children continue displaying symptoms throughout adulthood. Several inter national epidemiological studies, carried out in different cultures and socioeconomic environments, have shown that ADHD is one of the most common disorders in adults and is estimated to affect between 2–5% of the general adult population [1]. Studies on adults with ADHD have shown that its presence is associated with a significant impairment on academic achievement, work adjustment, interpersonal relationships, drug use, greater frequency of traffic accidents and crime problems [1,3]. Nowadays, evolutionary studies are available with over 30 years of monitoring [4,5]. Moreover, many genetic and neuroimaging studies have been performed that show differences between adults diagnosed with ADHD and those without. Regarding genetic research, differences have been found in the serotonergic and dopaminergic system, neurotrophic factors, the SNARE complex and the gene latrophilin-3, among others [6]. Similarly, neuroimaging studies have shown brain abnormalities at the structural, functional and connectivity level [7]. These findings have been mainly observed in the inferior frontal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal, as well as striatal regions, anterior cingulate and cerebellar parietotemporales [7,8]. The diagnosis of ADHD in adults has been reflected in international diagnostic classifications since DSM-III, in 1980, which reported that the disorder can persist into adulthood for some of the affected children. The new version, DSM-V, makes even more explicit references to the progression of ADHD into adulthood, adapting the current criteria to the disorder’s evolutionary reality [3]. At present, there are reliable psychometric instruments for diagnostic assessment of ADHD in adults, as in other psychiatric disorders for this population, such as bipolar disorder or schizophrenia [1,3]. Therefore, from the current research, ADHD in adults has good evidence based on epidemiological, genetic, neuroimaging, clinical characteristics, psychosocial impairments and diagnostic instruments. Despite the data presented above, ADHD remains an underdiagnosed disorder in adults worldwide [1,3,9,10]. This situation is common to other psychiatric disorders beginning in childhood, such as autism. As a result, there is an undertreatment of ADHD in adulthood, which has major societal and personal costs [11]. “...attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is one of the most common disorders in adults and is estimated to affect between 2–5% of the general adult population.”
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