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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Psychiatry. 2017 Oct 20;175(2):140–149. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17030298

Figure 3. Adult-Onset ADHD Case: Symptom Counts according to Parent, Teacher, Self, and Combined Reports at each Available Assessment Point.

Figure 3

Note. For Case G, ADHD symptoms reported at age 13.46 and 15.15 were deemed by a panel of clinical experts to be attributable to other mental disorders (anxiety disorders and mania). As a result, onset of symptoms that appear unattributable to other disorders occurs at 21.05 years. Symptoms in the shaded region exceed DSM-5 age-specific symptom thresholds. Childhood Health and Behavioral History was reported retrospectively at baseline. Substance use and mental health diagnoses were obtained from the parent and self DISC interview. P=Parent report, T=Teacher Report, S=Self Report. Bold lines represent combined report across raters using an β€œor” rule. Two voters dissented for the inclusion of Case G based on symptom presence at age 21.05. For cases G and H, symptom duration was reported to be over six months on the DISC interview.