Inattentive ADHD Treatment Considerations

Inattentive ADHD treatment should not be the same as the treatment for the other subtypes of ADHD. The symptoms of people with Inattentive ADHD (ADHD-PI) and Sluggish Cognitive Tempo (SCT) are different and their response to stimulant medication is quite different. Inattentive ADHD treatment proves to be more difficult for some psychiatrist and psychologist because people without hyperactive or impulsive symptoms will not respond to stimulants as positively and in the same way as typical ADHD patients will. 

When using stimulants for Inattentive ADHD treatment, the Adderall family of stimulants may perform better than the Ritalin family. Ritalin has been found in studies to make individuals with no hyperactive symptoms, such as those with SCT or ADHD-PI, feel strange, anti-social or depressed. Ritalin acts differently than Adderall on the Neurotransmitters that are thought responsible for the symptoms of ADHD-PI but it is not clear why some people treated for ADHD-PI with Ritalin tolerate it so poorly. 

Adderall, which is in the amphetamine class of stimulants, may occasionally also cause the side effects described above but studies have proved them to have less of these negative side effects and be better tolerated by patients with SCT and ADHD-PI when compared to the Ritalin or Methylphenidate family of stimulants. 

When using stimulants for Inattentive ADHD treatment, practitioners must follow a "start low and go slow" approach because researchers have found that the treatment of ADHD-PI is best achieved with low doses of stimulants that are titrated or adjusted to higher doses slowly. 

Russell Barkley, arguably the most respected expert in the ADHD scientific community, has reported that Inattentive ADHD treatment is unique and that physicians should expect that only one in five ADHD-PI patients will show a sufficiently therapeutic response to stimulant therapy to justify maintaining them on medication. Two thirds will show a mild improvement but those improvements are not enough to call them clinical responders. Barkley goes on to say that the dosing used to treat ADHD-PI is also different. He reports that the other subtypes do better on moderate to high doses of stimulants whereas, "Inattentive children, if they are going to respond at all, respond at very light doses, very small doses." 

There are some researchers who feel that Inattentive ADHD treatment should not involve stimulants at all. One researcher reported that the treatment response to stimulants of people with Inattentive ADHD was "hauntingly familiar to that seen in normal children placed on stimulants" (Rapoport and colleagues). These researchers found that 'normal' children and children with ADHD-PI become hypo-active and report feeling 'strange' while on the stimulants. 

These same researchers have observed that when stimulants are used to treat people with ADHD-PI or SCT, that these patients become sluggish and their symptoms appear to worsen. Decreasing the activity level of people who have low activity levels to begin with, as is the case in Sluggish Cognitive Tempo, or normal levels of activity, as is the case of ADHD-PI is, they report, inappropriate. 

Some psychiatrists have found that a few ADHD-PI and SCT patients do better when their ADHD-PI symptoms are treated with Atomoxetine (Strattera) or Guanfacine (Tenex). These Inattentive ADHD treatment medications act on different neural pathways that are thought to be amiss in ADHD-PI and SCT. These medicines act less on motor activity and some psychiatrists and researchers believe that they are, therefore, better candidates for treating ADHD-PI symptoms such as slow cognitive processing and working memory deficiencies. 

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has been found to be more useful for treating the Inattentive subtype of ADHD than it is for treating the combined type or Hyperactive/Impulsive type of this disorder. The CBT treatment strategies that work best for Inattentive ADHD treatment are behavioral therapies that specifically target the symptoms that are most problematic in ADHD-PI and SCT. Cognitive behavioral programs that address motivational deficiencies, memory problems, organizational skills deficiencies and time management problems have been shown to offer great promise for the treatment of Inattentive ADHD and SCT.

Cognitive Behavioral Programs designed for the Hyperactive/Impulsive and Combined types of ADHD will not be nearly as useful for the Inattentive ADHD treatment. These programs tend to address different areas of difficulty such as impulsive behavior that do not need remediation or treatment in patients with ADHD-PI and SCT. These programs often pay less attention to the unique difficulties seen in ADHD-PI, such as the everyday memory failures and motivational deficits that can cause major disruptions in the lives of people with ADHD-PI and SCT and for these reasons, they will be less effective. 

Inattentive ADHD treatment and SCT treatment poses several challenges for health care providers not only because the nature of the Inattentive ADD symptoms of this disorder are different but also because their response to medication and behavioral therapies are different. Health care providers should be cautious when using stimulants as Inattentive ADHD treatment or SCT treatment.  Inattentive ADHD treatment programs that involves a stimulant medication should take a ‘start slow and go slow’ approach to treatment. All behavioral Inattentive ADHD treatments and SCT treatments should be tailored to treat the unique symptoms seen in these disorders. It is imperative that health care providers take these considerations into account because all inattentive ADHD treatment programs will be more successful if an approach such as this one is implemented.

2 comments:

  1. Another great and thoughtful post! Thanks Tess. I wanted to share my experience with this.

    I take Focalin XR which is in the Ritalin family and works amazingly well for my inattentive ADD. My Dad and sister both take Adderall. My sister who is half the size of my Dad takes twice as much as he does (or more). We all supposedly have the same condition and are in the same family, but this demonstrates an important point: everyone's different.

    That said, no matter who you are, if you start taking a stimulant, you should absolutely "start low and go slow." When in doubt, take less.

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  2. Thanks so much for posting this comment. As you pointed out, even in the same family, the dosing will be different!!

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