Ep.
146
ADHD and Pain Before Diagnosis: What a 700,000-Child Study Found
In this Research Recap, we break down a large population-based study examining pain-related diagnoses in children before they were diagnosed with ADHD.
We usually think of ADHD as behavioral.
But what if some of the earliest signals weren’t behavioral at all?
In this Research Recap, we break down a large population-based study examining pain-related diagnoses in children before they were diagnosed with ADHD.
Researchers looked at over 700,000 medical records to ask a simple question:
Were children later diagnosed with ADHD already showing higher rates of pain-related medical visits?
The association was clear.
The explanation is not.
No fear-based framing.
No causation claims.
No medical advice.
Just what the data actually shows, and what it doesn’t.
What We Cover
The design of the study and why pre-diagnosis data matters
14% higher abdominal pain and 35% higher limb pain diagnoses before ADHD diagnosis
The difference between experiencing more pain vs requiring more pain management
Theories around neurodevelopment, neuroinflammation, and altered pain perception
Why this raises important questions without changing how ADHD is diagnosed
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