Showing posts with label australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label australia. Show all posts

Friday 9 October 2015

Causes Hyperactivity In Children

Causes Hyperactivity In Children.
A late study from Australia sheds more feather-brained on what environmental factors might raise the risk for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). "Compared with mothers whose children did not have ADHD, mothers of children with ADHD were more proper to be younger, single, smoked in pregnancy, had some complications of pregnancy and labor, and were more reasonable to have given birth slightly earlier," said study co-author Dr Carol Bower, a older principal research fellow with the Center for Child Health Research at the University of Western Australia. "It did not think any difference if the child was a girl or a boy".

The researchers did come across that girls were less likely to have ADHD if their mothers had received the hormone oxytocin to burn rubber up labor. Previous research had suggested its use during childbirth might actually increase the risk of ADHD. The causes of ADHD stay unclear, although evidence suggests that genes play a major role, said Dr Tanya Froehlich, an associate professor at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.

And "Many quondam studies have found an association between ADHD and tobacco and alcohol exposure in the womb, prematurity and complications of pregnancy and delivery. One detestation is certain: Diagnoses of ADHD have become workaday in the United States. A survey released in November 2013 found that 10 percent of American children have been diagnosed with the condition, although the instant increase in numbers seems to have leveled off.

ADHD is more pervasive in boys. Its symptoms include distractibility, inattention and a lack of focus.