If you live with both ADHD and persistent digestive symptoms including; bloating, unpredictable bowel habits, stomach pain, you may have assumed the two are unrelated.
Emerging research suggests otherwise. The gut and brain communicate through shared biological pathways, and ADHD may be connected to gut dysfunction more directly than most people realise.
A structured ADHD assessment can help clarify the full picture. Get clarity now:
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
If you live with both ADHD and persistent digestive symptoms including; bloating, unpredictable bowel habits, stomach pain, you may have assumed the two are unrelated.
Emerging research suggests otherwise. The gut and brain communicate through shared biological pathways, and ADHD may be connected to gut dysfunction more directly than most people realise.
A structured ADHD assessment can help clarify the full picture. Get clarity now:
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
The connection between ADHD and gut health is an active area of research. A large population-based study found that individuals with ADHD had significantly higher rates of gastrointestinal disorders, including IBS, constipation, and functional abdominal pain, than those without ADHD.¹ A 2023 review confirmed that people with ADHD are more likely to report gastrointestinal symptoms across multiple categories, and that the relationship is bidirectional, gut problems may worsen ADHD symptoms, and ADHD-related factors may exacerbate gut dysfunction.²
The likely mechanism involves the gut-brain axis: the network of neural, hormonal, and immunological pathways through which the gut and the brain regulate each other. Dopamine, the neurotransmitter most centrally implicated in ADHD, is also produced in the gut, where it regulates motility and the gut’s own nervous system. Disruptions to dopamine function that underlie ADHD may therefore also affect gut regulation.
The DSM-5 groups specific learning disorders into three domains. Each has its own presentation and its own relationship with ADHD. This page covers the full picture, with Dyslexia briefly signposted here as it has a dedicated page.
The most common SLD. Affects reading accuracy, fluency, and spelling.
Between 25–40% of people with ADHD also have dyslexia.
Both conditions impair working memory and processing speed, which is why they are so frequently found together.
A specific difficulty with number sense, arithmetic, and mathematical reasoning; not explained by low intelligence or poor teaching.
Significantly more common in children with ADHD than in the general population.
A specific difficulty with the physical act of writing and with translating thoughts into written language.
Closely connected to ADHD because both conditions impair the fine motor control, working memory, and executive planning that writing requires.
Digestive symptoms are highly variable between individuals. Understanding what is typical of IBS-like gut dysfunction and what is typical of ADHD helps clarify whether both may be present.
Note: Every person’s experience is different. The patterns below are meant to help you recognise and name what you or your child may be experiencing, not to replace a professional assessment.
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional gut disorder, meaning the gut is structurally normal but does not function normally.
Common gut symptom:
In children:
ADHD affects attention, activity levels, and impulse control in a persistent and consistent way across all settings.
In children:
In adults:
Fatigue, difficulty concentrating, irritability, and unpredictable symptoms can arise from gut dysfunction, ADHD, or a combination of both.
Irritable bowel syndrome and related functional gut disorders are conditions in which the digestive system does not function normally despite appearing structurally intact. IBS is one of the most common gut conditions worldwide, affecting around 10% to 15% of the population, and it is associated with significant quality of life impairment. In people with ADHD, rates appear to be higher than in the general population, and the two share neurobiological overlap through the gut-brain axis.¹
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention, activity levels, and impulse control. ADHD involves differences in dopamine regulation that affect not only brain function but, emerging research suggests, also gut function via the enteric nervous system. ADHD-related stress, impulsive eating patterns, irregular mealtimes, and disrupted sleep all create conditions that directly affect gut health.
Seeing overlap in both columns? ADHD may be contributing to gut symptoms through multiple pathways. An ADHD assessment is a useful step for anyone navigating both.
The gut-brain axis is a two-way communication system. The vagus nerve, gut microbiome, immune signals, and shared neurotransmitters, including dopamine and serotonin, link gut function to brain function continuously and in both directions. ADHD disrupts this system at multiple points.
Research shows that children and adults with ADHD have measurably different gut microbiome profiles compared to neurotypical controls; specifically, lower diversity and differences in the bacterial species associated with dopamine and short-chain fatty acid production.³ Whether these microbiome differences are a cause or a consequence of ADHD is not yet fully established, but the relationship is biologically coherent and clinically significant.
ADHD also disrupts gut health through behaviour. Impulsive eating, large quantities, fast consumption, high-sugar, low-fibre choices, directly affects the gut microbiome and motility. Irregular mealtimes, skipped meals, and poor hydration are all harder to manage with ADHD and are all recognised contributors to IBS-like symptoms. The daily habits that maintain gut health are precisely the habits that ADHD makes most difficult to sustain.²