View Full Version : Studies: ADHD meds don't up kids' drug abuse risk


hollyduck
04-06-08, 09:34 AM
Science News
Week of April 5, 2008; Vol. 173, No. 14 , p. 211

Without Substance: ADHD meds don't up kids' drug abuse risk
Bruce Bower

Stimulants have long been prescribed to children diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD. Over the past decade, child psychiatrists have debated the long-term potential for these medications to trigger drug abuse. Two new studies indicate that the stimulants do not increase children's risk of abusing cocaine, nicotine, and other drugs as adults.

Although these findings come as a relief to child psychiatrists, not all the news is good. The new investigations, already published online and slated to appear in the May American Journal of Psychiatry, underscore earlier evidence that youngsters with ADHD frequently become drug abusers, whether or not they take prescribed stimulants.

"It is still critical that young people with ADHD be screened for substance abuse," says Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, Md.

Boys with ADHD who start stimulant treatment early, at age 6 or 7, face a lower risk of later drug abuse than do those who begin taking medication later, between ages 8 and 12, report psychologist Salvatore Mannuzza of New York University's Child Study Center and his colleagues.

In the 17-year study, 27 percent of early-treated participants abused drugs by their mid-20s. That roughly equaled the drug abuse rate among young men who had never had any psychiatric ailments.

In contrast, 44 percent of late-treated boys became drug abusers by young adulthood, a rate comparable to earlier estimates for ADHD kids regardless of their treatment. Most of these late-treated children were diagnosed as grown-ups with another psychiatric ailment—:antisocial personality disorder, a condition often accompanied by drug abuse. These volunteers likely became adult drug abusers because of this condition, not because of stimulant treatment as children, Mannuzza says.

Mannuzza's team studied 176 white, middle-class boys, ages 6 to 12, who were treated for ADHD with methylphenidate, often marketed as Ritalin. None of these youngsters displayed conduct disorder, regarded as a precursor of antisocial personality disorder.

Follow-up interviews with volunteers occurred at around ages 18 and 25. The researchers also tracked 178 psychiatrically healthy males from age 18 to 25.

Early stimulant treatment may protect kids with ADHD against conduct disorder, thus lowering later drug abuse rates, Mannuzza suggests.

Yet preliminary results from a large study of ADHD treatments, published in 2007, don't support that hypothesis, remarks psychologist James M. Swanson of the University of California, Irvine, a coauthor of the article. Over that study's first three years, early-treated children showed no decreased chance of acquiring conduct disorder, says Swanson.

The second new study, directed by psychiatrist Joseph Biederman of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, evaluated 112 boys with ADHD, ages 6 to 17, and then re-examined them 10 years later. Of those boys, 82 received stimulant treatment for all or part of the follow-up period.

In early adulthood, treated and untreated boys displayed comparable drug abuse rates, similar to those reported for late-treated boys by Mannuzza. But Biederman's group found no tendency for early stimulant treatment to protect against later drug abuse.

http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20080405/fob1.asp

Imnapl
04-06-08, 12:13 PM
Thanks for that, Hollyduck. This study definitely backs up what we are reading on the forums from real people.

SB_UK
04-06-08, 01:12 PM
the meds supply help to good kids in a bad system;
kids deserve better.

Establishment people though get lazy and turn to bureaucracy instead of quality.

At least we have the Internet though -

yay!

No matter how expensive life gets out there -
we can always retreat in here

petrol at record highs
car tax up
mortgage rates sky high
property prices booming or busting
recession looming
company execs spooking markets to make a fast buck


itsa' collapsing -

yay!!!

when did toys become more profit margin than fun !!!
And then all profit margin and no fun -
- quality not quantity

- nonADD society has no metric for quality.

Why do kids need more stimulation?
Because adults get lazy.

SB_UK
04-06-08, 01:13 PM
You can't fix stupid.

so raise it to the ground

Mike77
04-07-08, 10:32 AM
I know one thing for certain. If I would have had ritalin or concerta before my 15th I'd never have become the heavy smoker I am now.

I'm using ritalin and concerta for about 6 months now and the time before I get "distracted" to another cigarette has like doubled or more. Because I'm basically much more relaxed smoking does feel nicer and I really enjoy a cigarette instead of inhaling it like I need a shot of nicotine.
Slowly I'm also getting more aware of the fact that smoking too much just does not feel well and for first time in my life I think I could actually stop smoking or at least reduce it to below 10 cigarettes a day. I'm not in a hurry or anything and 'since I'm way over 10 pack years allready from smoking alone and the environment here probably doubles that figure, I'm just gonna take it slowly so I don't become another jojo like most quiters...;)

Ow, and another thing. Alcohol is almost same story, and also with this drug I notice for the first time in my life how people actually try to push you into drinking in many social settings...

My two cents; First put kids on strict diet with lots of fibers, fruits and fish. Remove the sugars and sugar replacements, use toothpaste without fluor after like 10th birthday(next to possible effects I dont notice the soft tissue in my mouth has improved drastically), no more milkproducts, no more massproduced meat with high fat concentration etc.
If that doesn't help after a year or so, try ritalin/concerta....