Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Medicating children for behaviors: antidepressants and anticonvulsants

(This is entry #7 in a series of posts regarding medicating children for behaviors)
In my previous posts, I have lead you down the winding road of medications currently being used to treat ADD/ADHD. It is no longer a disorder for which the child receives a stimulant medication and everyone is satisfied. In an alarming new treatment trend, additional medications such as antipsychotics, blood pressure medications, anticonvulsant (seizure) medications and antidepressants are now being added to the daily medication schedule.

Ritalin, Adderal and Concerta are the stimulant medications most commonly prescribed for ADD/ADHD. Today, they are available in a long-acting form initially intended to allow the child to fore go a lunchtime dose and still receive the calming effects of the medication for the entire day. The frightening new trend I am seeing regularly is the long-acting medication is prescribed for both morning and lunchtime, resulting in an overlap of medication in the latter part of the day. Predictably, when this higher dose of stimulant takes effect, the child becomes nervous, agitated, refuses to eat, shows mood swings and explosiveness. When this behavior is demonstrated, parents seek additional medical help, and the child is often diagnosed "bipolar."

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, youth with bipolar disorder experience unusually intense emotional states that occur in distinct periods called "mood episodes." An overly joyful or overexcited state is called a manic episode, and an extremely sad or hopeless state is called a depressive episode.

Antidepressant medications often prescribed for "bipolar" are Trasadone, Tofranil, Zoloft, Prozac, Paxil, Remeron, and Sinequan. According to manufacturers' labels, many of these medications come with their own risks of side effects, including: irritability, acne, headaches, sleep disorders, and emotional side effects. You should know that the FDA has issued a "black box warning" for worsening depression and suicidal thoughts in adolescents using antidepressants. Further, some antidepressant medications change the liver's ability to break down other medications, potentially causing a dangerously high level of some medications in the bloodstream.

Doctors who prescribe antidepressants for bipolar disorder usually prescribe an anticonvulsant medication to be used as a mood stabilizer at the same time. The anticonvulsant medications most commonly prescribed are Tegretol, Trileptal, Depakote, Neurontin, Lamictal and Topamax. Again, according to manufacturers' labels, many of these medications come with their own risks of side effects, including: drowsiness, headache, constipation and diarrhea. However, Depakote may cause a reduction in blood count levels, or an inflammation of the liver. The risk of liver damage is increased when Depakote is used with other anticonvulsant medications in children under the age of 10 years. Now combine this risk of liver damage with the liver problems associated with antidepressants; these drugs are routinely being prescribed together!

Please take the time to read all of my previous posts discussing this subject; my hope is that this information will help you to wade through all of the advice, recommendations, expectations, and fears which will inevitably come with parenting a child with behavior difficulties.

3 comments:

Donna Marie Laino said...

Great post Lori. I am Pediatric and Public Health nurse currently working as a Certified School Nurse in the Philadelphia School District. I have seen so much medication prescribed in the last 10 years for children that it is alarming. Some of these kids were misdiagnosed.

Recently, I picked up on a student who I referred to a neurologist for possible sleep disorder. It seems that is a field that is being missed. Too much medication prescribed and not enough study and assessment of what is really going on.

Thanks for your posts.

Donna Marie Laino, Rn
Holistic Pratitioner

www.CreatingBalanceInYourLife.com

Lori Kloc RN, BSN said...

Dear Donna,
Thank you for the positive feedback. While I am not pleased to hear that you have noted the same trend, it is encouraging that those of us in School Nurse practice have the same concerns regardless of geographic location. Hopefully we can be the voices for the parents who need our assistance.
Lori

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