Advertisement
5 diet mistakes
Still fat? DietDoc identifies five of the most common diet mistakes people make.
A cancer we can beat
Cervical cancer kills 250 000 women every year. We can eliminate it. Why don't we?
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND

Links
 Healthy home
 Find a buddy
 Fitness
 Diet & Food
 Psychology

ADHD
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Ritalin: the latest facts
What does the little dreamer staring out of the classroom window have in common with the wild boy forever disrupting the class with his hyperactive and energetic behaviour, or with the morose, irritated child wanting to smack the little boy next door?

 
Advertisement
They all suffer from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) or Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). About 1–2 children in a class of 20 suffer from these disorders and need to be treated with Ritalin or other prescribed medication. Not all children with learning problems suffer from ADHD. Yet a lot of children who should not be treated with Ritalin, are using it, while a lot of children who can benefit from medication, are not diagnosed and treated.

What is ADHD?

According tot Dr. Colleen Adams and Prof. Mick Leary, paediatricians at the Red Cross Children’s Hospital, ADHD is a neuro-behavioural problem resulting from a malfunction in part of the brain controlling self control. The frontal lobes and adjacent brain areas are not functioning at full capacity, and the child’s concentration, activity and self control are affected.

It appears that the areas of the brain receiving auditary and visual information might be overloaded in children with ADHD. These overloaded brain areas are bombarded with unfiltered and insufficient information. Research has shown an imbalance in the neurotransmitters noradrenalin and dopamine in the frontal lobes of ADHDchildren.

Most children with ADHD are born with this disorder, but it is only diagnosed at schoolgoing age. Hereditary factors cannot be ignored. It is six times more common in boys than in girls. It affects about 5-7% of all children, with 2% affected severely.

The disorder consists of two components: some children are hyperactive (restless, impulsive, irritated, frustrated, discontented, impatient), while others are hypoactive (dreamers, not paying attention, easily distracted, subtle learning problems) or even a combination of these two flip sides of the coin in one child.

Academic performance

Most children with ADHD suffer academically despite being intelligent, and have difficulty with learning, reading, spelling and mathematics. A genius like Einstein might have suffered from ADHD. A lot of these kids can’t concentrate, disrupt the class, do not complete tasks and are not well liked by peers.

They have problems with their short-term memory, are disorganised and disgruntled. Most ADHD kids exhibit the social and emotional maturity of a child two thirds his age, and show a lack of common sense. They are accident prone due to poor impulse control and lack of fine motor skills.

Up to 60% of these kids will continue their strange behaviour into their adult life. More and more children with ADHD need medication as teenagers and adults.

Treatment

Treatment involves medication and structuring of a routine at home with all the family members involved, less stress and confrontations, behavioural therapy and a better self image. It is important that all the correct tests are done to establish the diagnosis of real ADHD. If more than 10% of a class is treated with Ritalin, it is overprescribed to children not really suffering from ADHD, warns paediatricians.

Ritalin is effective in 80% of real ADHD cases. It stimulates the underutilised self control area of the brain, resulting in the hyperactive child calming down and the dreamer being activated. In both cases, concentration improves. In the other 20% of cases medication like Tofranil, Catapres, Aurorix or Petrofan work well. The right medication can improve a child’s problem by 80%.

Post a question to Cybershrink.


 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent
 JOBS
Operations Manager
R20,000-25,000 Per Month Cost To Company Incl Benefits
Gauteng - East Rand
Financial Accountant: CA(SA)
R400,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Key Account Manager
Gauteng
Java Developer-CT
Western Cape - Cape Town
Java Developer-Jozi
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Cost To Company Plus Benefits
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Market Related Plus Benefits
South Africa
Case Manager
R210,000-220,000 Per Annum Negotiable
Gauteng - Pretoria
Previous Next
 
Subscribe to...
*Daily tip
*Weekly tip
Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
Click here.
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

 
 Other areas
ADHD
ADHD
ADHD in adults?
ADHD in girls overlooked
ADHD in the classroom
ADHD kids show brain differences
ADHD: Actress tells her story
ADHD: not just for kids
ADHD: What now?
Adult ADHD: an overlooked problem
Are too many kids on Ritalin?
Attention disorder - not just for kids
ADHD
Diet and ADHD
Diet may help ease attention disorder
Eye test could detect ADHD in kids
Failure to diagnose ADHD
Homework and the child with ADHD
Is ADHD a disease or not?
Is Ritalin safe?
Learning disabilities
Parenting a child with ADHD
Seasonal allergies and ADHD
Stripping away ADHD myths
The ABC of ADHD
ADHD and Ritalin:the latest facts
Does your child suffer from ADHD?
Wellness: A new look at back pain, ADHD and other problems
Omega-3: a solution to ADHD?
State Ritalin shock
 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement

 

© Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
  
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information.
Verify here.