Your ADHD Child May Just Be Tired
Copyright 2005 Daily News Central
Children who have symptoms of Attention Deficit/Hyperactive
Disorder (ADHD) actually may be sleep-deprived, according to
researchers at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology Sleep
Laboratory.
Doctors should consider that possibility before prescribing
Ritalin and other ADHD drugs, they suggest.
An estimated 8 percent of US children suffer from ADHD,
according to the US Centers for Disease Control, and more than
half of them are being treated with drugs.
ADHD is characterized by overalertness and nervousness, with
affected children being fidgety and overstimulated.
Paradoxically, the use of stimulant medications like Ritalin
seems to be the most effective method for treating ADHD symptoms
in the majority of children.
Fighting to Stay Awake?
Dr. Giora Pillar wondered whether some children diagnosed with
ADHD might simply be sleepy. Their excessive motor activity
could be a tool to stay alert, he conjectured, which might
explain the effectiveness of stimulants that increase activity
in the central nervous system.
"Sleepy children, unlike sleepy adults, may demonstrate
hyperactivity and attention-deficit behavior rather than
excessive daytime sleepiness," Pillar explained.
"This theory is supported by parental reports that children,
when extremely tired, tend to be cranky, overactive, angry and
aggressive," he pointed out.
Sleep Apnea
Pillar and colleagues studied 66 children with an average age of
12. Of these, 34 already had been diagnosed with ADHD, and the
rest served as a control group. The ADHD-diagnosed children had
significantly higher levels of sleepiness during the day than
those in the control group, the researchers found.
Half of the test subjects with ADHD (vs. 22 percent of the
control group) suffered from some degree of sleep-disordered
breathing, such as sleep apnea, which is characterized by
interruptions in breathing that last 10 seconds or more,
occurring at least five times per hour during sleep.
Limb Movement Disorder
Fifteen percent (vs. none in the control group) had Periodic
Limb Movement Disorder (PLMD), which is relatively uncommon
among children.
Studies have shown that treatment of these sleep disorders in
children often leads to substantial improvements in behavior and
cognitive achievements, Pillar said, as well as a significant
reduction in irritability, bad moods, anger and fear.
For example, school performance, which is low in children with
sleep apnea, has been found to improve markedly following the
removal of adenoids and tonsils to correct the disorder.
Enforce Good Sleeping Habits
The researchers urge parents of hyperactive and
attention-deficit children diagnosed with sleep disorders to
have breathing irregularities and limb movements treated, to
enforce good sleeping habits, and to avoid giving them
caffeinated drinks at night.
Only if these steps do not work, they say, should parents
consider medication for ADHD.
The researchers' findings originally were published in the
February 2004 issue of the journal Sleep.