February 7, 2022
Enteroviruses (EV) are a class of RNA viruses. This group of viruses includes some no-longer endemic forms such as polio and some serious but rare forms that cause encephalitis and meningitis. The most common virus in this population and period (1999-2003) was EV71, which can have complications, sometimes fatal, especially for children under five years old. It has also been linked to various chronic diseases, many of them neurological.
Is it associated with the subsequent diagnosis of ADHD and, if so, to what extent?
Taiwan offers an excellent opportunity to study this in an entire population. This is because of its single-payer health care system. Its database "the National Health Insurance research database" covers 99.5 percent of the population.
The Taiwanese study team used a sub-database, the Longitudinal Health Insurance Database 2000, containing claims data from a million persons randomly sampled from the parent database.
From this database, the researchers identified over 49,000 EV patients. They excluded all who were 18 and older, were missing essential data or had been diagnosed with ADHD, epilepsy, topic diseases, coronary artery disease, stroke, rheumatoid arthritis, or systemic lupus erythematosus before being diagnosed with enterovirus. That left an EV cohort of 14,168, who were matched with an equal number of non-EV individuals matched by age and sex.
After adjusting for age, sex, paternal occupation, and urbanization level of the residence, the EV cohort group was found to have a 25 percent greater risk for ADHD than the control group.
Jui-Ju Tseng, Chien-Heng Lin, and Ming-Chih Lin, "Long-Term Outcomes of Pediatric Enterovirus Infection in Taiwan: A Population-Based Cohort Study," Frontiers in pediatrics(2020),https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2020.00285.