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ADHD and Pain Before Diagnosis: What a 700,000-Child Study Found
Description
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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