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Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperactives as young adults: a controlled prospective ten-year follow-up of 75 children.

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TLDR
There was evidence that hyperactive subjects had some continued symptoms from the hyperkinetic child syndrome, including impulsive personality traits, and no subjects were found to be psychotic, but two were diagnosed as borderline psychotic.
Abstract
• This study reports on a variety of outcome variables from 75 hyperactive and 44 matched control subjects aged 17 to 24 years (mean ages, 19.5 and 19.0 years, respectively). All hyperactive subjects have been followed up for 10 to 12 years; they were first evaluated at 6 to 12 years of age. None of the hyperactive subjects was treated with methylphenidate, although a subgroup received chlorpromazine or a mixture of drugs (excluding methylphenidate). The hyperactive subjects had less education than the controls and a history of more car accidents and more geographical moves. However, only a minority were still engaged in continued antisocial behavior or had evidence of severe psychopathology. No subjects were found to be psychotic, but two were diagnosed as borderline psychotic. There was evidence that hyperactive subjects had some continued symptoms from the hyperkinetic child syndrome, including impulsive personality traits.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adult Outcome of Hyperactive Boys: Educational Achievement, Occupational Rank, and Psychiatric Status

TL;DR: The adolescent outcome of this cohort found that these disturbances were dependent on the continuation of ADHD symptoms, and in adulthood, antisocial and drug disorders appeared, in part, independent of sustained ADHD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperactive boys almost grown up. I. Psychiatric status.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the greatest risk factor for the development of antisocial behavior and drug abuse is the maintenance of ADDH symptoms, which followed the onset of conduct disorder in the overwhelming majority of cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Academic and Educational Outcomes of Children With ADHD

TL;DR: Future research must use conceptually based outcome measures in prospective, longitudinal, and community-based studies to determine which pharmacologic, behavioral, and educational interventions can improve academic and educational outcomes of children with ADHD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adult psychiatric status of hyperactive boys grown up.

TL;DR: It is strongly suggested that children with ADHD are at significantly higher risk for a specific negative course marked by antisocial and substance-related disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychiatric Status of Hyperactives as Adults: A Controlled Prospective 15-Year Follow-up of 63 Hyperactive Children

TL;DR: There was evidence that the hyperactives had more overall psychopathology and functioned generally less well than did normal controls and a significant percentage had an Antisocial Personality Disorder on both the modified SADS-L and the DSM-I diagnostic criteria.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale

TL;DR: The Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BRS) as mentioned in this paper was developed to provide a rapid assessment technique particularly suited to the evaluation of patient change, and it is recommended for use where efficiency, speed, and economy are important considerations.
Journal Article

Social Class and Mental Illness: A Community Study

TL;DR: The ten-year collaborative research directed by Hollingshead and Redlich has already produced some twenty-five papers; and the general drift of their work is very well known, but in "Social Class and Mental Illness" most of the major data are given for the first time in detail.
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Hyperkinetic behavior syndrome in children.

TL;DR: A laboratory procedure, the photo-Metrazol EEG, offers a means of explaining the mechanism and confirming the existence of the hyperkinetic syndrome, which is characterized by hyperactivity; short attention span and poor powers of concentration; impulsiveness; irritability; explosiveness; variability; and poor school work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on the hyperactive child. 8. Five-year follow-up.

TL;DR: Sixty-four severely handicapped hyperactive children, most of whom had associated handicaps of the minimal brain dysfunction syndrome, were restudied behaviorally, scholastically, and neurologically five years later at adolescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperactive children as teenagers: a follow-up study.

TL;DR: The symptoms of restlessness, distractibility, impulsiveness, excitable, excitability, and aggressiveness seemed to persist in most of the children, and were associated with poor performance in school and low self-esteem.
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