If you have ADHD or think you might:
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When ADHD Isn’t ADHD: The Cushing’s Syndrome Connection You Need to Know

If you are an adult presenting with attention problems for the first time in your 30s, 40s, or 50s, the default clinical path often leads to an ADHD evaluation, a self-report screener, and a prescription. That path works well when the diagnosis is correct. When it isn’t — when the true driver is a pituitary or adrenal tumor producing excess cortisol — stimulant medication may provide modest symptomatic relief while the underlying disease progresses untreated. Cushing’s syndrome, left unaddressed, carries serious cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurological consequences. The case for accurate differential diagnosis is not academic.

For parents and clinicians, the issue is equally consequential in pediatric cases, where Cushing’s is rarer but does occur — particularly in certain genetic conditions — and where attention and behavioral symptoms may be the earliest presenting complaint.

Is There a Definitive Test for ADHD?

This article explains why ADHD has no single definitive test, how clinicians combine the DSM-5 criteria with interviews, rating scales, and differential diagnosis to reach an accurate conclusion, and what makes that process reliable despite its complexity. You will learn what a competent evaluation looks like, why “ruling out” other conditions is a feature rather than a flaw, and how to advocate for yourself if your diagnosis—or someone’s dismissal of your concerns—does not feel right.

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