Perinatal Pitocin as an early ADHD biomarker: neurodevelopmental risk?

L Kurth, R Haussmann - Journal of attention disorders, 2011 - journals.sagepub.com
L Kurth, R Haussmann
Journal of attention disorders, 2011journals.sagepub.com
Objective: To investigate a potential relationship between coincidental increases in perinatal
Pitocin usage and subsequent childhood ADHD onset in an attempt to isolate a specific risk
factor as an early biomarker of this neurodevelopmental disorder. Method: Maternal
labor/delivery and corresponding childbirth records of 172 regionally diverse,
heterogeneous children, ages 3 to 25, were examined with respect to 21 potential predictors
of later ADHD onset, including 17 selected obstetric complications, familial ADHD incidence …
Objective
To investigate a potential relationship between coincidental increases in perinatal Pitocin usage and subsequent childhood ADHD onset in an attempt to isolate a specific risk factor as an early biomarker of this neurodevelopmental disorder.
Method
Maternal labor/delivery and corresponding childbirth records of 172 regionally diverse, heterogeneous children, ages 3 to 25, were examined with respect to 21 potential predictors of later ADHD onset, including 17 selected obstetric complications, familial ADHD incidence, and gender. ADHD diagnosis and history of perinatal Pitocin exposure distinguished groups for comparison.
Results
Results revealed a strong predictive relationship between perinatal Pitocin exposure and subsequent childhood ADHD onset (occurring in 67.1% of perinatal Pitocin cases vs. 35.6% in nonexposure cases, χ2 = 16.99, p < .001). Fetal exposure time, gestation length, and labor length also demonstrated predictive power, albeit significantly lower.
Conclusion
The findings warrant further investigation into the potential link between perinatal Pitocin exposure and subsequent ADHD diagnosis.
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