Altfas (2004) [21]
|
215 patients with obesity treated in a specialized obesity clinic (Males: 22; mean age: 43.4 ± 10.9 years)
|
Prevalence of ADHD in the whole sample: 27.4%. Prevalence of ADHD in individuals with BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2: 42.6%. Mean BMI loss among patients with ADHD: 2.6 BMI (kg/m2) vs. 4.0 for non-ADHD (p < 0.002)
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Erermis (2004) [22]
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30 adolescents with obesity (Males: 14; mean age: 13.8 ± 1.2 years) seeking treatment in a paediatric endocrinology outpatient clinic
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Prevalence of ADHD: 13.3%
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Agranat-Meged (2005) [23]
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26 adolescents in a tertiary referral centre for obesity (Males: 13; mean age: 13.04 ± 2.8 years ), all with morbid obesity (BMI > 95 percentile)
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57.7% of the subjects presented with ADHD diagnosed with semi-structured interviews
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Fleming (2005) [24]
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75 women with severe obesity (BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2) (mean age: 40.4 ± 7.25 years) referred for non surgical treatment of obesity
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26.7% of women reported impairing symptoms of ADHD in both childhood and adulthood
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Alfonsson (2012) [25]
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187 individuals (Males: 50; mean age: 44.28 ± 6.02 years) with obesity, candidate for bariatric surgery
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10% of the subjects presented with ADHD. ADHD symptoms significantly correlated with anxiety, depression, and disordered eating (“lack of control over eating”, “eating alone because embarrassed”, “eating until feeling uncomfortable”, and “feeling guilty after overeating”)
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Gruss (2012) [26]
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116 patients (Males: 31; mean age: 44.28 ± 6.02 years) candidate for bariatric surgery
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12% of the patients screened positive for ADHD. Rates of Binge Eating disorder did not differ between patients with and without ADHD
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Nazar (2012) [27] |
150 women (mean age: 38.9 ± years) |
Prevalence of ADHD: 28.3%. ADHD was significantly correlated with more severe binge eating, bulimic behaviors, and depressive symptoms severity |