Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 November 2006

Take A Walk To Boost Your Energy

No more excuses about not exercising, as per this article:

"Take A Walk To Boost Your Energy - MediaIndia 4 Nov 2006

A walk may boost your energy and help fight fatigue if you are feeling tired, suggests a new study. Patrick O'Connor and colleagues at the University of Georgia analysed 70 studies on exercise and fatigue involving more than 6,800 people, reported the online edition of health Magazine WebMD. More than 90 percent of the studies showed the same thing - sedentary people who completed a regular exercise programme reported improvement in fatigue levels compared to groups that did not exercise. "It's a very consistent effect. The results show that regular exercise increases energy and reduces fatigue," said the study published in the Psychological Bulletin. "
Read more here
Source-IANSSRM

Friday, 3 November 2006

Patch new option for treating ADHD

Patch new option for treating ADHD: "WASHINGTON, DC, United States (UPI) -- Medication for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, can now be delivered through a patch, researchers reported Friday.

The patch, called DAYTRANA, is meant for children 6 to 12. It gives physicians greater control over the amount of time a child is on medication, as it is easily administered and removed, said Dr. Timothy E. Wilens, a consultant to Shire, the company that produced the patch and funded the research."

By Leah Carliner Nov 2, 2006, 20:10 GMT

Click here for more details

Saturday, 30 September 2006

Sound slumber linked to learning

by PEGGY CURRAN, The Gazette
Published: Sunday, September 24, 2006

"Reut Gruber has a simple, old-fashioned remedy for the modern plugged-in child.

Bring back bedtime. Turn off the TV, put a curfew on the computer, lower the lights and crack open a storybook.

Gruber, a clinical child psychologist and sleep researcher at the Douglas Hospital Centre, isn't surprised when parents complain that their sons and daughters are hyper, fidgeting when they ought to be sleeping, then fractious and disruptive in class the next day.

The poor kids are exhausted."

Click here for full article


I know many people with adhd sleep poorly. When I get more z's I feel a lot better, but it is hard to get to bed when you are feeling all hyper!

Sunday, 24 September 2006

Health Canada revises ADHD drug info to warn about agitation, hallucinations

Health Canada revises ADHD drug info to warn about agitation, hallucinations

"13:06:02 EDT Sep 21, 2006
TORONTO (CP) - Health Canada is revising its prescribing and patient information for all ADHD drugs in Canada because of the 'potential for psychiatric adverse events.'

These have included rare events of agitation and hallucinations in children, spokesman Paul Duchesne said Thursday from Ottawa."

Read more

Tobacco, Lead May Be Missing Link To ADHD, Children

Research indicates that tobacco & lead may be factors in adhd:

"Study Stresses Importance Of Staying Away From Toxins During Pregnancy

POSTED: 1:58 pm EDT September 22, 2006
UPDATED: 8:05 pm EDT September 22, 2006
Millions of children suffer from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They cannot seem to sit still or concentrate on anything for any length of time at home or in school, but a new study may offer new clues into what causes the condition."

for more click:
WRAL.com - Health - Tobacco, Lead May Be Missing Link To ADHD, Children

Thursday, 29 June 2006

Article: Study reveals how attention deficit drugs work (Jun 26, 2006)

Study reveals how attention deficit drugs work
June 26, 2006 by Paroma Basu

"Although millions depend on medications such as Ritalin to quell symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), scientists have struggled to pinpoint how the drugs work in the brain.

But new work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is now starting to clear up some of the mystery. Writing in the journal Biological Psychiatry, UW-Madison researchers report that ADHD drugs primarily target the prefrontal cortex (PFC), a region of the brain that is associated with attention, decision-making and an individual's expression of personality.

The finding could prove invaluable in the search for new ADHD treatments, and comes amidst deep public concern over the widespread abuse of existing ADHD medicines.

"There's been a lot of concern over giving a potentially addictive drug to a child (with ADHD)," says lead author Craig Berridge, a UW-Madison professor of psychology. "But in order to come up with a better drug, we must first know what the existing drugs do."

A behavioral disorder that afflicts both children and adults, ADHD is marked by hyperactivity, impulsivity and an inability to concentrate. The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that 2 million children in the U.S. suffer from the condition, with between 30 to 70 percent of them continuing to exhibit symptoms in their adult years.

Despite public anxiety over the treatment of a behavioral condition with drugs, doctors have continued to prescribe meds like Adderall, Ritalin and Dexedrine because - quite simply - they work better than anything else.

ADHD drugs fall into a class of medications known as stimulants. ADHD stimulants boost levels of two neurotransmitters, or chemical messengers in the brain, known as dopamine and norepinephrine. Dopamine is thought to play a role in memory formation and the onset of addictive behaviors, while norepinephrine has been linked with arousal and attentiveness.
Berridge notes that scientists have learned little about how ADHD drugs work because past studies have primarily examined the effects of the medicines at high doses. High-dose stimulants can cause dramatic spikes in neurotransmitter levels in the brain, which can in turn impair attention and heighten the risk of developing addiction.

"It is surprising that no one was looking at low-dose (ADHD) drugs because we know that the drugs are most effective only at low doses," says Berridge. "So we asked the natural question: what are these drugs doing at clinically relevant doses?"

To answer that question, Berridge and his team monitored neurotransmitter levels in three different brain regions thought to be targeted by ADHD drugs: the PFC and two smaller brain areas known as the accumbens which has been linked with processing "rewards," and the medial septum, which has been implicated in arousal and movement.

Working with rats, the researchers conducted laboratory and behavioral tests to ensure that animal drug doses were functionally equivalent to doses prescribed in humans. Then, using a type of brain probe - a process known as microdialysis - the UW-Madison team measured concentrations of dopamine and norepinephrine in the three different brain areas, both in the presence and absence of low-dose ADHD stimulants.

Under the influence of ADHD drugs, dopamine and norepinephrine levels increased in the rats' PFC. Levels in the accumbens and medial septum, however, remained much the same, the scientists found.

"Our work provides pretty important information on the importance of targeting the PFC when treating ADHD," says Berridge, "In particular it tells us that if we want to produce new ADHD drugs, we need to target [neurotransmitter] transmission in the PFC."

In the future, Berridge and his colleagues plan to look deeper within the PFC to gain more detailed insights into how ADHD medicines act on nerves to enhance cognitive ability.
Other contributors to the study include UW-Madison co-authors David Devilbiss, Matthew Andrzejewski, Ann Kelley, Brooke Schmeichel, Christina Hamilton and Robert Spencer, and Yale Medical School researcher Amy Arnsten. "

Source: University of Wisconsin - Madison News

Saturday, 17 June 2006

Article: More poor on ADHD drugs

A recent article in the Border Mail newspaper notes that there is a socio-economic element to prescription of drugs for adhd:

"POORER children are more likely to be prescribed drugs for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder because they can’t access alternative treatments, the Australian Medical Association says.

Medicare figures show kids in lower socio-economic areas of NSW are up to 10 times more likely to be put on ADHD drugs than those in affluent areas.

Scrips for the two major ADHD drugs available on the Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme were issued at a rate of one for every 25 children under 14 in poor areas.

AMA vice-president and child psychiatrist Dr Choong-Siew Yong said the trend was likely to be true for Australia as a whole.

It was not surprising given that families in poorer areas generally presented with more problems than in affluent areas, Dr Yong said.

But he said it was also likely that poorer children were not accessing the non-medication treatments recommended before they’re prescribed ADHD drugs dexamphetamines and methylphenidate, marketed as Ritalin.

These alternatives include individual and family group counselling, behavioural management strategies, school support and treatment for other conditions like depression and anxiety."

Read more here ...

Source: The Border Mail, Australia, 14 June 2006