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Nearly 4.5 million American children ages 4 to 17 suffer from attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Because not all these children respond to medications such as Ritalin or Adderall, some parents turn to herbal supplements to treat the symptoms associated with the neurobehavioral disorder.
“There are a lot parents who have concerns about having their kids take stimulants such as Ritalin,” Weber says. “
Medications used to treat ADHD have the same inhibiting effects on brain chemicals. Blocking the uptake of the chemicals seems to result in improvement in ADHD-diagnosed children’s ability to pay attention, Weber says. The children also are less hyperactive.
In the last 10 years, the FDA approved Strattera, a non-stimulant drug that blocks norepinephrine uptake. Weber and her colleagues hypothesized that extracts from
The researchers conducted the first-ever randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial designed to treat children diagnosed with ADHD with
The other 27 children received a placebo filled with rice protein powder and activated charcoal to match the color of the
To measure the changes in attentiveness, researchers used the psychiatrist-developed ADHD Rating Scale-IV and the Clinical Global Impression scale. Using these diagnostic tools, the researchers can rank improvement in behavior on a scale of 0–54 and 0–7, respectively.
The study found no statistically significant improvement in the behavior of children given the hypericin versus those given the placebo. On the ADHD rating scale, for example, inattentiveness improved, on average, 2.6 points for the children taking the experimental treatment. The behavior improved 3.2 points for those taking the placebo.
Weber says for FDA-approved medications such as Strattera and Ritalin, the improvement in attention increases by 10 to 15 points on the ADHD rating scale. She also notes that in clinical trials researchers tend to see what they call the placebo effect, where participants show improvement even though they are not receiving medication.
“This study was well done,” says Eugenia Chan, a developmental-behavioral pediatrician at Children’s Hospital Boston. “It was a small study, and it is possible that with a much larger sample of patients you might find that there is some positive effect of
But, she adds, this study is the first of its kind for
“It is important to keep in mind that herbs and supplements are not always safe or well-studied. They can have side effects, and they are not regulated to the degree that pharmaceutical drugs are,” Chan says. “Because of the lack of regulation, the potency can differ from pill to pill within the same bottle.”
One possible reason for the results is that the hypericin in the pills used in the study may have degraded over time, Weber says. This problem could also affect the
She says that if researchers want to retest
“People deserve to know and be able to understand the potential risks and benefits to all treatments they may be considering,” Chan says.
Currently, physicians are better able to explain the risks and benefits of FDA-approved drugs, such as Ritalin, because a large research base exists for these types of medications.
“There isn’t the same accumulation of high quality evidence for most complementary and alternative medicine therapies. This study used rigorous methodology to study one of those therapies,” Chan says, “and I hope it inspires others to do the same.”
Found in: Biomedicine and Body & Brain
- Wendy Weber; Ann Vander Stoep; Rachelle L. McCarty; Noel S. Weiss; Joseph Biederman; Jon McClellan Hypericum perforatum (St John's Wort) for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Children and Adolescents: A Randomized Controlled Trial. JAMA. 2008; 299(22):2633-2641.

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