Curious to hear what others think, as this definitely aligns with my own experiences.

The original study is behind a paywall, but I’m trying to see if I can get a hold of the full text somehow. For now, here’s the abstract.

Abstract

Objectives: Recent studies report a fluctuating course of attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) across development characterized by intermittent periods of remission and recurrence. In the Multimodal Treatment of ADHD (MTA) study, we investigated fluctuating ADHD including clinical expression over time, childhood predictors, and between- and within-person associations with factors hypothesized as relevant to remission and recurrence.

Methods: Children with DSM-5 ADHD, combined type (N = 483), participating in the MTA adult follow-up were assessed 9 times from baseline (mean age = 8.46) to 16-year follow-up (mean age = 25.12). The fluctuating subgroup (63.8% of sample) was compared to other MTA subgroups on variables of interest over time.

Results: The fluctuating subgroup experienced multiple fluctuations over 16 years (mean = 3.58, SD = 1.36) with a 6- to 7-symptom within-person difference between peaks and troughs. Remission periods typically first occurred in adolescence and were associated with higher environmental demands (both between- and within-person), particularly at younger ages. Compared to other groups, the fluctuating subgroup demonstrated moderate clinical severity. In contrast, the stable persistent group (10.8%) was specifically associated with early and lasting risk for mood disorders, substance use problems in adolescence/ young adulthood, low medication utilization, and poorer response to childhood treatment. Protective factors were detected in the recovery group (9.1%; very low parental psychopathology) and the partial remission group (15.6%; higher rates of comorbid anxiety).

Conclusions: In the absence of specific risk or protective factors, individuals with ADHD demonstrated meaningful within-individual fluctuations across development. Clinicians should communicate this expectation and monitor fluctuations to trigger as-needed return to care. During remission periods, individuals with ADHD successfully manage increased demands and responsibilities.

  • rand_alpha19@moist.catsweat.com
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    5 days ago

    When I’m in the zone (hyperfocusing), I can stay awake for 20+ hours doing something. But just because I’m not experiencing symptoms doesn’t mean I’m totally fine, lol. It’s incredibly stressful to keep up with the demands I make of myself even when I’m able to do it.

      • rand_alpha19@moist.catsweat.com
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        4 days ago

        Sure, but I interpreted “reduced symptoms” to mean an overall reduction in the symptoms normally experienced by that person. Maybe that’s not what they describe in the study but it’s how I initially read the headline and it feels accurate to my situation.

        When I hyperfocus, I generally don’t experience a lot of the other issues I usually do, such as lack of attention, constant multitasking, analysis paralysis, etc. I feel more motivated to do a particular thing and, at the end of a day of doing that, I do generally feel more productive.

    • RedSeries@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      100% this. Coming out of an extended hyper focus is not only exhausting, it’s untenable. The burnout feels awful.

      • aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        The Brian zaps are the worst afterwords too. Walk into a room and. Yup. No idea what I’m here for lol