A new study, published Monday in the American Journal of Psychiatry,
confirms what I've been warning about for years in my scientific books
and articles. The stimulants used to treat children for so-called ADHD
can cause sudden cardiac arrest and death in kids. The study was
published by the journal online in advance of regular publication in
the near future. On Monday, I had the opportunity to comment on the
study on Good Morning America. Here is more detail.
The stimulant group of drugs includes amphetamines like Adderall and
Dexedrine and methylphenidate products such as Ritalin, Concerta, and
Focalin. The study focused on Ritalin because at the time it was more
commonly used than the amphetamines, although amphetamines are probably
even more toxic to the heart.
The results of the study were as dramatic as they are tragic.
Children and youth age 7 to 19 taking prescribed Ritalin for ADHD were
four to five times more likely to die of sudden unexplained cardiac
arrest than other children who were not taking Ritalin.
Despite these ominous results, the study was skewed to hide just how
many children die of sudden death when taking Ritalin. The study relied
heavily on identifying cases through toxicology reports at autopsy. But
autopsy studies for the detection of these controlled substances are
geared to detect more massive doses from addiction and overdose. They
are not sensitive enough to detect many cases of routine prescription
use. As a result, many stimulant-caused deaths were probably missed.
Also, the study excluded a large number of sudden deaths if the
children had even the slightest evidence of pre-existing heart disease.
They excluded these children even when the coroner thought that heart
disease played no role in the death. For example, if a child was taking
stimulants and had minimal heart disease, such as a slightly enlarged
heart, the researchers didn't include the case as a possible death due
to the stimulant. They also did not count children who were severely
obese, anorexic, or asthmatic. But all of these children, especially
ones with undetected heart disease, are much more highly at risk for of
stimulant-induced sudden death. They even excluded children whose
parents had some forms of heart disease.
It's as if they did not want to confirm the obvious--that an
examination of children with heart disease and related disorders would
swell the numbers of those killed by Ritalin. In fact, the current FDA
approved label specifically mentions the risk of cardiac sudden death
when Ritalin is given to children with heart conditions.
Unconscionable, the study researchers were trying not to
prove that stimulants cause sudden death in children. They made the
findings despite their own attempts to avoid it. I was not surprised to
find that some of the researchers for this study are among the biggest
advocates of psychiatric medications for children.
Sudden cardiac death in children is rare, probably occurring--as the
study notes--in a slightly little less than 1 in 100,000 children. But
we need to take a few other facts into account. First, the rate is
going to be much higher in children taking stimulant drugs. Not just
the four or five times higher found in this study, but many more times
higher when vulnerable children are included such as those with
undetected heart disease, severe obesity, asthma, or anorexia. Second,
stimulant drugs are one of the few causes of cardiac death in otherwise
normal children, making it impossible to detect the risk before it
happens.
There is also evidence from studies of stimulant addicts and case
reports that stimulant drugs can cause heart disease, including
inflammation and scarring. When drugs like Ritalin and Adderall are
prescribed in routine pediatric doses, they commonly cause
hypertension, which can lead to an enlarged heart. Yet children with
even slightly enlarged hearts were excluded from the study. So the
researchers ended up excluding any children with enlarged hearts caused
by the stimulant treatment itself.
The same is true in regard to anorexia. Stimulants commonly cause
anorexia. The researchers therefore excluded cases of stimulant-induced
death in anorexic patients when the anorexia itself could have been
caused by the stimulant.
Meanwhile the psychiatric establishment--represented by American
Psychiatric Association, NIMH and drug companies--has been quick to
dismiss the importance of the study. Instead, they should be
emphasizing that the study detected the risk even though the highest
risk patients were excluded, including some who were displaying toxic
stimulant effects such as heart disease and anorexia.
Meanwhile, it's hard to imagine a greater tragedy for the surviving
family than the unexpected death of a child from taking a medication
prescribed by a doctor. I've been involved as a medical expert or
consultant for families in several tragic cases of stimulant-induced
cardiac death. I've also been an expert in cases of suicide in children
caused by stimulants. These tragic deaths are always heartbreaking.
Years afterward, the emotional wounds remain as raw as ever for their
parents and brothers and sisters. The family's trust for doctors and
the healthcare system can be forever shattered.
Yet the answer to this problem is simple. Don't give stimulants to
children. There are far better non-drug ways to deal with so-called
ADHD. ADHD is defined as involving hyperactivity, inattention, and
impulsivity. These are not diseases--they are disciplinary and
educational problems. Very often these children improve dramatically
when parents develop a more consistent, rational and loving plan for
discipline. Sometimes the problem completely disappears when the child
is assigned a better teacher.
At times the child diagnosed with ADHD is simply a little delayed in
learning self-discipline or finding the motivation to study. Often
something is distressing the youngster, such as peer ridicule and
abuse. Or the child may be especially full of life and need more
opportunity to run, to play, and to be creative.
Whatever these children need, they don't need toxic drugs that can
lead to drug addiction, cause psychosis and depression, stunt growth,
impair brain function, and even cause sudden cardiac arrest. I describe
and document all of these adverse stimulant effects, and many more, in
my medical book, Brain-Disabling Treatments in Psychiatry: Drugs, Electroshock, and the Psychopharmaceutical Complex, Second Edition (2008).
Our children don't need drugs--they need us to protect them from
misguided health professionals while we make every effort to meet their
real needs in our families and schools. It's time for all of us to
retake responsibility for our children.
Dr. Breggin's latest book is Medication Madness: The Role of Psychiatric Drugs in Cases of Violence, Suicide and Crime (St. Martin's, 2008). It is now in paperback. (...)
Source: Huffington Post - http://tinyurl.com/macm9v