Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren't all 6 year old kids hyper? Having taken adderall since I was about 8, I think it should be illegal to medicate kids that young. It completely stripped me of my personality, it didn't help me do well in school and I don't remember a lot from after I started taking it. I only started doing well in school (university) when I stopped taking it.
Some kids are just really hyper. It's their child personality. If you work with it instead of medicating it away, you might find yourself raising a great person.
OP here. I'm guessing you aren't the parent of a SN kid? No, some kids really *are* that much more hyper than others. Our DS was a danger to himself and others when he was unmedicated. We didn't go a day that some well meaning stranger would comment "whoa - he is really a handful" with a pitying look.
Further, it was literally impossible to "parent" our son before he was medicated. He was too hyper and couldn't sit still or process instructions because his brain was going a mile a minute. Once we started medicating, it was amazing because he could finally "hear" us for the first time. This was also the advice of all the behavior therapists we talked to, who said a 4-7 year old boy can't access the behavior tools you give him if his brain can't calm down.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a doctor supervising this medication tape? Rebound effects are a standard response to reduce stimulant dosages, and it can take a good week (sometimes longer) for someone to adjust to a lower dose.
Anonymous wrote:Aren't all 6 year old kids hyper? Having taken adderall since I was about 8, I think it should be illegal to medicate kids that young. It completely stripped me of my personality, it didn't help me do well in school and I don't remember a lot from after I started taking it. I only started doing well in school (university) when I stopped taking it.
Some kids are just really hyper. It's their child personality. If you work with it instead of medicating it away, you might find yourself raising a great person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful, OP. I'm not trying to scare you. But a few kids have horrible side effects. My 14 year old son tried to take his life after coming off of Vyvanse. We were working with our doctor to determine if his drastic mood shifts were caused by fluctuating medication levels. He has severe ADHD but we will never give him or any of our kids another stimulant. Had I known this was a possibility, we never would have used medication.
He has been off medication for two years. He struggles is school. But he is happy and healthy. Never, ever again.
To the PP who posted this, was your DS taking it daily and if so for how long? I'm sorry to hear your son had so much trouble coming off it. Did you taper him off? I would appreciate any details you're willing to share.
Our DS has been taking just M-F when in school, if off weekends and takes as needed in summer so not daily. He does seem grumpier the day after he stops.
He was on Adderall for two years. We switched to Vyvanse to try to avoid the afternoon drop. He kept saying he felt "flat" and we couldn't get him to do any of the things he normally loved. He was also always angry. The psychiatrist thought Vyvanse might be a better choice. He was on it for six months before we decided to wean him off of it. He tried to kill himself about a week later. He said he just felt like nothing mattered anymore. His therapist thinks the medication kept his emotions up so high that when he came down, he just couldn't cope.
He is a different kid off medication. He still has ADHD. It's difficult to manage. But not as difficult as the mood swings, anger, and depression.
And PP - I'm not trying to scare anyone. I wish someone had told me depression and suicide we're real risks. I might have been able to intervene sooner. I hope you never have to deal with a suicide attempt. My son tried to slice his wrists. It is a something no parent should ever see.
Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. Saturday was his first day where we bumped down to 10mg adderall (compared with previous 15mg). He's still on 2 mg intuniv, which he takes in the mornings. Saturday he was a bit hyper but nothing too bad. He was pretty wildly hyper yesterday (day 2). Like, my DH and i are struggling to remember him ever being that hyper before he started adhd meds (2 years ago). The hyperactivity was just his body being in full motion -- running around the house, jumping on furniture etc. He was having trouble focusing on things for more than a few minutes. Just by way of background, focus was never his problem. He was just too hyper and, in particular, touchy and physical in school. If not for school, we used to say we could have lived with his behavior at home. But sheesh, yesterday's behavior is hard to imagine living with!!
All that said, he's quite compliant (when i tell him to clean something, he does it, for example) and extremely happy. DH and i both agree that his personality is really shining through. No irritability at all (though a little crying about a few things yesterday).
So the weird thing is that he is this hyper -- but he's still on 10mg adderall and 2mg intuniv. It's not like we dropped him off everything. In fact, last fall he was on 10mg adderall and NO intuniv, and he was getting by in school. Now he's on 10mg adderall and intuniv, and i just dropped him off at camp and wondering how long it'll be before i get a call to come pick him up.
So a couple questions:
1. Does it sound normal to have extreme hyperactivity in the days tapering off adderall? Will he readjust? Time frame?
2. You'd think he'd have some benefit to having 10mg adderall in his system. But it's like he might as well have no adderall in him. If 15mg is his *perfect* adderall dose to keep him well behaved, is it possible that the dose below (10mg) will have zero effect? or would you expect it to have *some* impact on his behavior, even if it leaves room for improvement?
Anonymous wrote:Aren't all 6 year old kids hyper? Having taken adderall since I was about 8, I think it should be illegal to medicate kids that young. It completely stripped me of my personality, it didn't help me do well in school and I don't remember a lot from after I started taking it. I only started doing well in school (university) when I stopped taking it.
Some kids are just really hyper. It's their child personality. If you work with it instead of medicating it away, you might find yourself raising a great person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful, OP. I'm not trying to scare you. But a few kids have horrible side effects. My 14 year old son tried to take his life after coming off of Vyvanse. We were working with our doctor to determine if his drastic mood shifts were caused by fluctuating medication levels. He has severe ADHD but we will never give him or any of our kids another stimulant. Had I known this was a possibility, we never would have used medication.
He has been off medication for two years. He struggles is school. But he is happy and healthy. Never, ever again.
To the PP who posted this, was your DS taking it daily and if so for how long? I'm sorry to hear your son had so much trouble coming off it. Did you taper him off? I would appreciate any details you're willing to share.
Our DS has been taking just M-F when in school, if off weekends and takes as needed in summer so not daily. He does seem grumpier the day after he stops.
Anonymous wrote:Be careful, OP. I'm not trying to scare you. But a few kids have horrible side effects. My 14 year old son tried to take his life after coming off of Vyvanse. We were working with our doctor to determine if his drastic mood shifts were caused by fluctuating medication levels. He has severe ADHD but we will never give him or any of our kids another stimulant. Had I known this was a possibility, we never would have used medication.
He has been off medication for two years. He struggles is school. But he is happy and healthy. Never, ever again.
Anonymous wrote:Be careful, OP. I'm not trying to scare you. But a few kids have horrible side effects. My 14 year old son tried to take his life after coming off of Vyvanse. We were working with our doctor to determine if his drastic mood shifts were caused by fluctuating medication levels. He has severe ADHD but we will never give him or any of our kids another stimulant. Had I known this was a possibility, we never would have used medication.
He has been off medication for two years. He struggles is school. But he is happy and healthy. Never, ever again.