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Adult ADHD Diagnosis
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Psych Central
- A new report issued during the Annual Meeting of the Royal
College of Psychiatrists suggests a significant number of adults
with unresolved depression, anxiety or addiction may actually have
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).
Authorities believe a correct
diagnosis of adult ADHD could lead to prescribed Ritalin-style
stimulant medications for a range of mental health problems that are
not usually associated with the disorder.
Stimulant medication is currently
only licensed for children with ADHD. However, the National
Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) is expected to
recommend that this class of drug can be prescribed adults with ADHD
in September 2008 - following the recognition that the condition
persists into adulthood in about 20 per cent of cases diagnosed in
childhood.
But while ADHD symptoms in children
include inattentiveness, hyperactivity and impulsiveness, the
condition in adults is associated with a much wider range of
co-existing mental health problems.
Professor Phillip Asherson,
professor of molecular psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry,
told the meeting: “Most frequently, adults with ADHD are diagnosed
with chronic and persistent depression and anxiety,
difficult-to-treat alcohol and drug addiction and personality
disorders.
“We don’t yet know whether these
co-existing disorders are separate problems or whether these people
are actually suffering from a form of ADHD that is presenting in a
different way from the normal symptoms. It could be that many people
are being diagnosed as having a separate disorder when in fact they
have got ADHD.”
Currently, clinicians are wary of
using stimulant medication in adults, as the only group of drugs
that are licensed only for use in children. However, Professor
Asherson said: “This is likely to change once the new NICE
guidelines are launched in September.”
Meanwhile, Professor Asherson is
about to embark on a major study to identify adults with ADHD who
present in GP surgeries and addiction centers.
“We have no idea as yet whether
these problems will respond to stimulant medication. If they do,
then this type of drug could provide effective treatment for a
significant number of adults who currently have unresolved mental
health problems,” he said. --
PsychCentral.com
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