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Health Information
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Saturday, November 22, 2008
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Find
more information about this topic from either the Web or the world's best
medical journals by using the search boxes at the top of this page.
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HYPERACTIVITY
Questions and Answers
| Q. |
Is there
a direct relationship between conduct disorder and ADHD,
and what percentage of children with ADHD have conduct
disorder?
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| A. |
Conduct disorder
is characterized by problems with the law, or what we
call delinquent behavior. There is a clear overlap in
studies of these disorders. Estimates indicate that
anywhere from 20 to 70 percent of children who have
ADHD also have conduct disorder. Children with conduct
disorder almost always have ADHD. That has been a big
problem for the whole field because people have often
felt the conduct disorder was a sociological phenomenon
and ADHD appears to be risk factor for developing antisocial
behavior.
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| Q. |
Do stimulant
medications affect a child's growth?
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| A. |
We have not
been studying the effect of medication on growth, but
one psychiatric journal reported that ultimate height
is not affected by stimulant medication. In some children,
stimulant medicines can slow down the growth process,
but when children are taken off the drug, growth rebounds.
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| Q. |
Is there
any evidence to support the claim that some ADHD treatment
medications might cause tics or Tourette syndrome?
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| A. |
Tourette
is a disorder characterized by facial tics, such as
eye blinking, facial twitches, shoulder or head twitches,
vocal tics, throat clearing, sniffling, or grunting,
which are all involuntary. Fifty percent of children
with Tourette syndrome, or tic disorders, will have
ADHD regardless of treatment with stimulant medication.
In studies of genetically identical twins, only one
of each twin pair was treated with stimulant medication,
yet all the twins developed Tourette. Stimulants most
likely do not cause Tourette. The data seem to indicate
that stimulant medication may delay the onset of Tourette,
if anything.
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| Q. |
Are there
any studies on female children, and what is the difference
between the way girls with ADHD and boys with ADHD act?
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| A. |
There are
about four to six studies on hyperactive girls that
indicate that girls generally have the same symptoms
as boys. No one can really understands why the described
referral rate for boys is higher. Many young girls have
ADHD as severe as that of boys. Hyperactive girls are
being studied much more commonly now.
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| Q. |
A parent
of an ADHD child recently wrote an article on the pros
and cons of medication - particularly Ritalin, a drug
said to cause depression in children. Have you found
this to be the case?
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| A. |
There is
no question that stimulants, when used in high doses
or in particularly sensitive kids, can make children
irritable, moody, and sad. The good news is that the
medication wears off quickly, usually within three to
four hours. Once the medication has worn off, a child's
mood returns to normal and then the dosage should be
reduced to eliminate further side effects.
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