Anonymous wrote:My nephew has been on Concerta and Adderal for a long time and is over 6'2". His parents are not tall, well mom might be, both parents are around 5'6". And what do you mean you tried Ritalin but no longer have a choice? You mean you tried it for a very short time? It has been my experience with my DD, that Concerta improved her appetite in the evenings, and with that came a bit of a weight gain and that should help with height. She started at 15 so it didn't matter height wise, but I do think if she started earlier it would have helped her eat more, leading to height gain. It has been my observation, that hyper kids eat more and grow more if on ADHD meds. But, just my observation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the responses so far. We did already see three different endocrinologists over the years. A previous X-ray of the wrist for bone age didn’t show any constitutional growth delay. The bone age matched his chronological age. DS is only about 1 percentile in height so will be only a little more than 5 feet tall, unless he has some unexpected height added at growth spurt like some male relatives. Probably more important for him to not lose an inch in height than to get good grades in middle school, taking a long term view? Although the psychological impact of failure and others constantly frustrated with him is also a concern.
So I was hoping to hear what others have experienced in terms of medications and expected height (e.g., any drop on growth curves).
07:27 again.
OP, my sympathies. My 12 year old is at the 3rd percentile - he was at the 2nd last year. We are about to do a wrist scan.
I was thinking of trying a lower dose:he's on 27 mg on generic Concerta (extended release), which has worked beautifully, and I wanted to try 18 mg, which is the next dose. Focalin and its generic suppressed his appetite even more. I think he could just about focus in his core classes, and then the meds would wear out during PE, and he wouldn't have much bandwidth for homework or extra-curriculars, whereas now the meds taper off at 5pm. I'm leery of trying non-stimulants, because they have a higher frequency of side-effects, but I guess we should both talk to our psychiatrists!
Sending you strength - our society places such a premium on height, at least for men, that it's really hard to balance different priorities.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the responses so far. We did already see three different endocrinologists over the years. A previous X-ray of the wrist for bone age didn’t show any constitutional growth delay. The bone age matched his chronological age. DS is only about 1 percentile in height so will be only a little more than 5 feet tall, unless he has some unexpected height added at growth spurt like some male relatives. Probably more important for him to not lose an inch in height than to get good grades in middle school, taking a long term view? Although the psychological impact of failure and others constantly frustrated with him is also a concern.
So I was hoping to hear what others have experienced in terms of medications and expected height (e.g., any drop on growth curves).
Anonymous wrote:Anecdotal stuff you pick up here isn't going to tell you as much as the peer reviewed research.
Find all the studies you can, make sure they are legitimate and follow children into adulthood.
http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2014/09/01/344283889/more-evidence-that-adhd-drugs-dont-curb-ultimate-height