ADHD is a disorder that manifests in childhood with two categories of core symptoms: hyperactivity/impulsivity and inattention. The prevalence of ADHD in school-age children is estimated to be between 9 and 15 percent, making it one of the most common disorders of childhood.
Hyperactive and impulsive behaviors almost always occur together in young children. The predominantly hyperactive-impulsive subtype of ADHD is characterized by the inability to sit still or inhibit behavior; symptoms typically are observed by the time the child reaches four years of age and increase during the next three to four years, peaking in severity when the child is seven to eight years of age. The predominantly inattentive subtype of ADHD is characterized by reduced ability to focus attention and reduced speed of cognitive processing and responding. Children with the inattentive subtype often are described as having a sluggish cognitive tempo and frequently appear to be daydreaming or "off task".
What are the most troubling symptoms seen in pediatric ADHD patients?
How willing are you to try newly approved innovative therapies instead of long-standing standard of care therapies?
Source:
• Wolraich, Mark L et al. “Clinical Practice Guideline for the Diagnosis, Evaluation, and Treatment of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Children and Adolescents.” Pediatrics vol. 144,4 (2019): e20192528. doi:10.1542/peds.2019-2528
Home > Focus Areas > ADHD Connect > Post
ADHD in Children
I’m an otolaryngologist working primarily with children and adults with sleep disordered breathing (SDB). About 50% of such children develop ADHD which is likely due to the adrenaline surges (micro-arousals) that occur during their sleep to help them breath through their airway obstruction. I just completed a study of 101 children w SDB and ADHD wherein I corrected their nasal breathing and measured executive function before and after surgery. The as yet unpublished data is very positive and shows that improving or correcting SDB can improve and/or reverse ADHD in these children. Lots more on this to follow as we comb through more of the data. The nasal surgery only takes 35 mins and the kids return to school the following day. This represents a big opportunity for many kids suffering with both of these conditions.
I am always open to using any method of therapy that would assist a child to do their best with their awesome adhd think out of the box mind!
I would love to have more therapies that had less side effect profiles that don’t disrupt sleeping and eating.
Also I love the idea of using tech like vr and gaming as adjunctive or single point therapy. I look forward to seeing new things down the line!
I welcome any new treatment with evidence of safety and efficacy; current treatments, while showing dramatic short-term improvement for the majority of patients, do not work for all, and when they do work, do not have compelling evidence of long-term benefit. Further, the meds have troublesome side effects and palatability problems. We greatly need effective, safe treatments with enduring benefit.
Families seem to be more comfortable with that idea.
a constant delivery system of medication that works evenly all day would be perfect
ready to go in the am without the ups and downs of dosing meds during the day