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ADHD Symptoms
Symptoms of ADHD usually tend to occur over the course of many months, usually with the symptoms of impulsiveness and hyperactivity setting in before those of inattention, which might not occur till about a year or more.
Symptoms of ADHD fall into two basic categories:
- Hyperactive / Impulsive Behavior
- Inattention
Symptoms of Hyperactive / Impulsive Behavior
Children who suffer from hyperactive or impulsive symptoms of ADHD tend to always keep moving. It is extremely hard for such children to sit in one place. These children usually try to do too many things at a single time, constantly changing their activity from one to the next.
Children who suffer from this type of ADHD known as the hyperactive/impulsive form of ADHD may:
- fiddle and writhe or go through a terrible time sitting in one place; it is nearly impossible for them to remain still
- move around all the time, repeatedly running or climbing incongruously
- have impenetrability with calm, inactive activities
- talk a lot
- let slip answers even if the question has not yet been completed
- speak unthinkingly or unsuitably
- show signs of complexity in waiting
- barge in or interrupt on others
Due to the fact that it is expected by very young children to be easily abstracted and hyperactive, it is usually the impulsive behaviors, which are inclusive of climbing her and there dangerously, bluntly insulting people etc that frequently are prominent in preschoolers who suffer from ADHD.
Symptoms of Inattention
Suffering from ADHD does not mean that a child just wont pay attention. Such children pay close attention and even enjoy doing or listening to things that are of interest to them. In this case they pay attention and remain focused, but difficulty arises when you try to move them on to another activity.
Some symptoms of the inattentive type of ADHD are:
- being effortlessly diverted from a chore, lesson, or discussion
- complexity focusing the mind on a particular thing
- getting uninterested when the task has not even been completed
- moving through details quickly
- making hasty errors
- trouble listening when directly spoken to
- intricacy following commands or finishing errands
- incompetence and absentmindedness
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