Why They're Often Confused
Overlapping Symptoms
| Symptom | Appears in ADHD | Appears in Anxiety |
|---|---|---|
| Difficulty Concentrating | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Restlessness | ✓ Yes (hyperactivity) | ✓ Yes (tension, agitation) |
| Task Avoidance | ✓ Yes (executive dysfunction) | ✓ Yes (avoidance of anxiety triggers) |
| Forgetfulness | ✓ Yes (working memory) | ✓ Yes (preoccupied with worry) |
| Sleep Problems | ✓ Yes (racing thoughts) | ✓ Yes (worry at night) |
| Irritability | ✓ Yes (frustration tolerance) | ✓ Yes (nervous tension) |
|
⚠️ CRITICAL DISTINCTION: Having these symptoms doesn't mean you have both conditions. The KEY is understanding why the symptom occurs and when it started. |
Key Differences: ADHD vs Anxiety
1. Source of Concentration Problems
|
🧠 ADHD Inattention:
|
😰 Anxiety-Related Concentration Problems:
|
Dr. Sultan's Clinical Pearl: "In anxiety, difficulty concentrating happens BECAUSE of worry and rumination. In ADHD, it's a core symptom present across all contexts, even when not anxious. Ask: 'When you're relaxed and happy, can you still not focus?' If yes, think ADHD."
2. Age of Onset
| ADHD | Anxiety Disorders |
|---|---|
|
Onset: Childhood (before age 12) Pattern: Symptoms present since elementary school Developmental history:
|
Onset: Variable (can develop at any age) Pattern: Often emerges in adolescence or adulthood Developmental history:
|
Diagnostic Requirement: For ADHD diagnosis, symptoms MUST have been present before age 12. If concentration problems only started at age 20, it's not ADHD (though adult-diagnosed ADHD means symptoms were present in childhood but unrecognized).
3. Pattern of Symptoms
|
ADHD:
Anxiety:
|
4. Content of Thoughts
ADHD: Mind wanders to random, unrelated topics
- "I was thinking about what to have for dinner, then remembered a funny video, then noticed the bird outside..."
- Thoughts jump rapidly between topics
- Not particularly negative or worry-focused
Anxiety: Mind fixates on worries
- "What if I fail? What if something bad happens? Did I make a mistake?"
- Repetitive, circular thinking (rumination)
- Future-focused catastrophizing
5. Response to Stress
ADHD: Symptoms often IMPROVE under pressure
- Crisis mode can trigger hyperfocus
- Deadlines create motivation (adrenaline helps focus)
- Emergency situations: peak performance
Anxiety: Symptoms WORSEN under pressure
- Stress intensifies anxiety
- Performance degrades under pressure
- Avoidance increases when stakes are high
Comorbidity: Having Both
The Statistics:
- 50% of people with ADHD also have an anxiety disorder
- 30% of people with anxiety disorders have ADHD
- This comorbidity is one of the most common in psychiatry
Why They Co-Occur
|
1. ADHD Leads to Anxiety (Secondary Anxiety) Chronic struggles with ADHD create anxiety-provoking situations:
This is called secondary anxiety—anxiety that develops as a consequence of living with ADHD. 2. Shared Neurobiology Both conditions involve:
3. Genetic Overlap Family studies show increased rates of both conditions in relatives, suggesting shared genetic vulnerabilities. |
Diagnostic Challenges with Comorbidity
When both are present:
- ADHD symptoms can be missed (overshadowed by more obvious anxiety)
- Anxiety can be misattributed to ADHD
- Treatment response helps clarify (if stimulants help concentration even when calm, think ADHD)
How to Tell Which One You Have
Questions to Ask Yourself:
| Question | ADHD Answer | Anxiety Answer |
|---|---|---|
| Did you have concentration problems as a child (before age 12)? | YES | Usually NO |
| Can you concentrate when you're calm and not worried? | NO - still can't focus | YES - focus improves |
| What distracts you? | External stimuli (sounds, sights) | Internal worries |
| Do you struggle with planning and organization? | YES - chronic problem | Not typically |
| Do you interrupt people or blurt things out? | YES - impulsivity | Usually NO |
| Does stress make your focus better or worse? | Better (crisis mode) | Worse (overwhelmed) |
| Do you have repetitive, worry-filled thoughts? | Not usually | YES - rumination |
| Do you avoid situations that make you anxious? | Not typically | YES - avoidance |
Treatment Implications
ADHD Treatment
First-line: Stimulant medications (methylphenidate, amphetamines)
- 70-80% response rate
- Improve focus, organization, impulsivity
- Learn about ADHD medications
Therapy: CBT for executive function skills, organizational strategies
Anxiety Treatment
First-line: SSRIs (sertraline, escitalopram) or therapy
- 50-60% response rate with medication
- Reduce worry, physical anxiety symptoms
Therapy: CBT, exposure therapy for specific fears
When You Have Both
|
Treatment Approach: 1. Treat ADHD First (Usually) Rationale: If anxiety is secondary to ADHD struggles, treating ADHD may reduce anxiety without needing anxiety-specific treatment. 2. Monitor Stimulant Response Concern: Stimulants can worsen anxiety in some people 3. Consider Combination Treatment Options:
4. Therapy is Essential Both conditions benefit from:
|
Real-World Examples
Case 1: ADHD Only
Sarah, 28: "I've always been scattered. Even as a kid, I'd lose my homework, forget my lunch, couldn't sit still in class. Now I'm 28 and I still can't focus—even when I'm relaxed on vacation, my mind jumps around. I'm not anxious, just...easily distracted."
Diagnosis: ADHD (childhood onset, pervasive inattention, no worry content)
Case 2: Anxiety Only
Mike, 35: "I was a great student until college. Then I started worrying constantly—about grades, about what people think, about my future. Now I can't concentrate because my mind is always racing with 'what ifs.' When I'm on vacation and relaxed, I can focus fine."
Diagnosis: Generalized Anxiety Disorder (adult onset, worry-driven, improves when calm)
Case 3: Both ADHD and Anxiety
Jessica, 32: "I've always been disorganized and impulsive—got in trouble in school for talking, losing things. Then in high school, I developed bad test anxiety because I kept failing despite trying hard. Now I have both—I can't focus even when calm (ADHD) AND I worry constantly about messing up (anxiety)."
Diagnosis: ADHD + Generalized Anxiety Disorder (childhood ADHD led to secondary anxiety)
Getting the Right Diagnosis
What to Tell Your Doctor
- Childhood history: "I struggled with X in elementary school"
- Current symptoms: Describe when concentration is hardest
- Worry content: Are your thoughts worry-filled or just random?
- Pattern: Chronic and stable, or episodic with triggers?
- Executive function: Do you struggle with planning, time management, organization?
Comprehensive Evaluation Includes:
- Developmental history (childhood symptoms)
- Symptom rating scales (ADHD-specific, anxiety-specific)
- Functional impairment assessment
- Ruling out other conditions (depression, medical causes)
- Sometimes: neuropsychological testing
Schedule Evaluation with Dr. Sultan →
Frequently Asked Questions
Can anxiety mimic ADHD?
Yes. Severe anxiety can cause concentration problems, restlessness, and task avoidance that look like ADHD. Key differences: anxiety-related symptoms improve when anxiety decreases, while ADHD symptoms are constant.
Can ADHD cause anxiety?
Yes. Chronic ADHD struggles (academic failure, social mishaps, disorganization) create ongoing stress that can develop into an anxiety disorder. This is called secondary anxiety.
Should I treat ADHD or anxiety first?
Usually ADHD first, especially if anxiety seems secondary to ADHD struggles. Treating ADHD may reduce anxiety without needing separate anxiety treatment. Discuss with your psychiatrist.
Will ADHD medication make my anxiety worse?
Most people tolerate stimulants well even with anxiety. For some, anxiety improves as ADHD-related stress decreases. If stimulants worsen anxiety, non-stimulant ADHD medications are available.
Can I take ADHD medication and anxiety medication together?
Yes. Stimulants (for ADHD) and SSRIs (for anxiety) are commonly prescribed together and generally safe. Always consult your doctor about medication combinations.
Related Resources
- Dr. Sultan's ADHD Expertise
- Complete ADHD Guide
- ADHD Diagnosis
- ADHD Medications
- Podcast: ADHD vs Anxiety
- Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria
- ADHD Self-Assessment