Neuropediatrics 2010; 41(2): 55-59
DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1261893
Original Article

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Impact of Long-Term Treatment of Methylphenidate on Height and Weight of School Age Children with ADHD

H. Zhang1 , M. Du1 , S. Zhuang1
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, P. R. China
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Publikationsverlauf

received 11.02.2010

accepted 11.06.2010

Publikationsdatum:
26. August 2010 (online)

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Abstract

Stimulant-associated growth deficits in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have long been a concern. We chose 146 school age children diagnosed with ADHD being treated with methylphenidate (MPH) and 29 drug-free ADHD children, and followed them up for 2–4 years. We recorded the changes in height and weight after long-term methylphenidate treatment and analyzed the influence of confounding factors to growth in height, weight, and height velocity. The change of the gap between patients’ height and mean height in the methylphenidate group was −1.86±0.82 cm (P<0.001); in controls it was −0.26±0.51 cm (P<0.05). The changes of height standard deviation score (SDS) in the methylphenidate group and controls were −0.14±0.23 SD (P<0.001) and +0.05±0.10 SD (P<0.05), respectively. The differences between the 2 groups were significant (P<0.001). Both correlation and regression analyses indicated that the duration of treatment contributed significantly to the variance in change of height (P<0.001). The height velocity was significantly attenuated in the first year. The change of the gap between the patients’ weight and weight for height after methylphenidate was −0.14±1.25 kg (P>0.05). From this study, a small but significant deceleration of height velocity has been identified as a long-term side effect of methylphenidate, the magnitude of the height deficit is related to the duration of treatment. Methylphenidate had no significant influence on weight and BMI values.

References

Correspondence

Hongyu Zhang

Department of Pediatrics

First Affiliated Hospital

Sun Yat-sen University

510080 Guangzhou

People's Republic of China

Telefon: +86/20/8775 5766 8310

eMail: drzhy@21cn.com