WIN or Get Huge Savings!
|
Children With ADHD Should Get Heart Tests Before Treatment With Stimulant Drugs Source: www.sciencedaily.com Date: 10/7/08
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) should get careful cardiac evaluation and monitoring -- including an electrocardiogram (ECG) -- before treatment with stimulant drugs, a new American Heart Association
statement recommends.
The
scientific statement on Cardiovascular Monitoring of Children and
Adolescents with Heart Disease Receiving Stimulant Drugs is published
online in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
In
1999, concerns over potential cardiovascular effects of psychotropic
drugs, especially tricyclic antidepressants, but including stimulants,
prompted an American Heart Association Scientific Statement:
Cardiovascular Monitoring of Children and Adolescents Receiving
Psychotropic Drugs. However, no specific cardiovascular monitoring was
recommended for the use of stimulant medications. Warnings from the U.
S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) about stimulant medications and
public concern for the safety of using them have prompted the current
statement.
Studies
have shown that stimulant medications like those used to treat ADHD can
increase heart rate and blood pressure. These side effects are
insignificant for most children with ADHD; however, they're an
important consideration for children who have a heart condition.
Certain heart conditions increase the risk for sudden cardiac death
(SCD), which occurs when the heart rhythm becomes erratic and doesn't
pump blood through the body.
Doctors
usually use a physical exam and the patient and family history to
detect the risk for or presence of health problems before beginning new
treatments, including prescribing medication. But some of the cardiac
conditions associated with SCD may not be noticed in a routine physical
exam. Many of these conditions are subtle and do not result in symptoms
or have symptoms that are vague such as palpitations, fainting or chest
pain.
That's
why the statement writing group recommends adding an ECG to
pre-treatment evaluations for children with ADHD. An ECG measures the
heart's electrical activity and can often identify heart rhythm
abnormalities such as those that can lead to sudden cardiac death.
"After
ADHD is diagnosed, but before therapy with a stimulant or other
medication is begun, we suggest that an ECG be added to the
pre-treatment evaluation to increase the likelihood of identifying
cardiac conditions that may place the child at risk for sudden death,"
said Victoria L. Vetter, M.D., head of the statement writing committee
and Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine in Philadelphia.
Vetter
also said doctors should evaluate children and adolescents already
taking these medications if they were not evaluated when they started
the treatment.
If
heart problems are suspected after the evaluation, children should be
referred to a pediatric cardiologist. Once stimulant treatment begins,
children should have their heart health monitored periodically, with a
blood pressure check within one to three months, then again at routine
follow-ups every six to 12 months.
"Children
can have undiagnosed heart conditions without showing symptoms," Vetter
said. "Furthermore, a child's body changes constantly, with some
conditions not appearing until adolescence." Children With ADHD Should Get Heart Tests Before Treatment With Stimulant Drugs
If
the initial ECG was taken before age 12 years, it may be useful to do a
repeat ECG after the child is over age 12 years, the statement says.
Widespread
use of ECGs to detect heart abnormalities, including screenings for
competitive athletes, is not routinely recommended by the American
Heart Association. However, the writing group found using ECG screening
in this specific population of children prescribed ADHD medication is
medically indicated and reasonably priced. That said, however, lack of
an ECG shouldn't mean that kids who need ADHD treatment can't get it.
"While
we feel that an ECG is reasonable and helpful as a tool to identify
children with cardiac conditions that can lead to SCD, if, in the view
of their physician, a child requires immediate treatment with stimulant
medications, this recommendation is not meant to keep them from getting
that treatment," said Vetter, who added that some children may not have
access to a pediatric cardiologist who can evaluate an ECG or perform a
cardiology consultation.
In
2003, an estimated 2.5 million children took medication for ADHD.
Surveys indicate that ADHD affects an estimated 4 percent to 12 percent
of all school-aged children in the United States, and it appears more
common in children with heart conditions. Studies report that,
depending on the specific cardiac condition, 33 percent to 42 percent
of pediatric cardiac patients have ADHD, Vetter said. The number of
undiagnosed children with heart conditions is unknown as routine heart
screening is not performed, but Vetter said that a recent pilot study
she presented at the American Heart Association's 2007 Scientific
Session indicated that up to 2 percent of healthy school aged children
had potentially serious undiagnosed cardiac conditions identified by an
ECG.
Data
from the FDA showed that between 1999 and 2004, 19 children taking ADHD
medications died suddenly and 26 children experienced cardiovascular
events such as strokes, cardiac arrests and heart palpitations. Since
February 2007, the FDA has required all manufacturers of drug products
approved for ADHD treatment to develop Medication Guidelines to alert
patients to possible cardiovascular risks.
Future
studies are necessary to assess the true risk of SCD in association
with stimulant drugs in children and adolescents with and without heart
disease, Vetter said. However, studying SCD associated with drugs is
difficult because the government's reporting system is voluntary, which
means local data on these types of deaths isn't always reported
nationally.
A
registry of SCD events is necessary for further investigating this
issue, the writing committee said. Such a registry would allow for a
more accurate understanding of SCD, including the true incidence of it
and the potential effectiveness of universal ECG testing and
pre-participation screening questionnaires.
The
statement writing committee said its recommendations are not intended
to limit the appropriate use of stimulants in children with ADHD.
"Our
intention is to provide the physician with some tools to help identify
heart conditions in children with ADHD, and help them make decisions
about the use of stimulant medications and the follow-up of children
who take them," Vetter said. "The goal is to allow treatment of ADHD,
while attempting to lower the cardiac risk of these products in
susceptible children."
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
|
FREE Vitamix 5200 Contest!
|