News

Psychostimulants reduce anxiety in children with ADHD


 

References

Contrary to popular belief, children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder receiving psychostimulants have a decreased risk of anxiety, according to a meta-analysis by Catherine G. Coughlin and her associates.

Twenty-three studies involving 2,959 ADHD patients were included in the meta-analysis. Children who received methylphenidate derivatives were less likely to experience anxiety, with a relative risk of 0.85, while children receiving amphetamine derivatives had a risk similar to that of those on placebo. Medication acting over a short time also reduced anxiety risk (relative risk, 0.83), compared with long-acting psychostimulants and placebo.

©mik38/thinkstockphotos.com

A higher dosage was found to decrease the risk of anxiety, with the reduction similar for both amphetamine and MPH derivatives. Overall, the relative risk for all children with ADHD taking any psychostimulant was 0.86, compared with that of children receiving a placebo.

“Clinicians should further consider rechallenging children with ADHD who report new-onset or worsening anxiety with psychostimulants but significant improvement in ADHD symptoms, as worsening anxiety symptoms are much more likely to be coincidental rather than caused by psychostimulants,” the investigators noted.

Find the study in the Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology (doi: 10.1089/cap.2015.0075).

lfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Tool helps patients, clinicians choose depression meds
MDedge Psychiatry
CBT improves depression but not self-care in heart failure patients
MDedge Psychiatry
NIH funds research on adolescent substance use and the brain
MDedge Psychiatry
Caring for refugees requires flexibility, cultural humility
MDedge Psychiatry
Large study identifies psoriasis as an independent risk factor for major depression
MDedge Psychiatry
Rate of schizophrenia-related ED visits twice as high in men
MDedge Psychiatry
Study: 90% of patients with remitted MDD feel inadequate, hopeless
MDedge Psychiatry
Study: 90% of patients with remitted MDD feel inadequate, hopeless
MDedge Psychiatry
Self-harm emergencies rise 50% after bariatric surgery
MDedge Psychiatry
For young adults, suicide rate highest in American Indians/Alaska Natives
MDedge Psychiatry