Strattera is not approved for use in children under 6, and the safety of the medication for this age group has not been studied. The only ADHD medication that I'm aware of that is approved for children ages 3-6 is Adderall (note that the extended release version, Adderall XR, is NOT approved for children under 6). Five years is very young to start ADHD medication, but if your child really does need it, talk to your child's doctor about trying Adderall rather than Strattera.
I tried Strattera recently, and stopped taking it after four days because the side effects were so severe. I was taking Ritalin before, which worked quite well except it wears off to early in the day for me, and now I'm taking Concerta, which has the same active ingredient as Ritalin but is a time-released formula so I don't have to take it as often (the active ingredient in Ritalin isn't approved for children under 6, but it's quite similar to Adderall, whereas Strattera is in an entirely different catagory of drugs). I've found that these stimulant medications have minimal side effects, and are quite effective.
I've heard mixed things about Strattera. It takes anywhere from 2 to 6 weeks to start working, so I didn't take it long enough to find out if it was going to work for me, but some people find that it never works. Others find that it works very well. Some people have significant side effects that don't go away. Others have minimal side effects when they first start taking it, which disappear over time.
Appart from individual variation in efficacy and side effects, the major advantages of Strattera are that a single dose lasts for 24 hours, and it doesn't have the potential for abuse that stimulants have (which shouldn't be a concern for your 5-year-old, but definitely is for teens and adults). I definitely understand why a doctor would recommend Strattera for an adult seeking treatment for ADHD for the first time, or for teenagers who are at fairly high risk for substance abuse, but why he'd recommend it as the first treatment option for a 5-year-old is beyond me.
2007-02-02 08:12:57
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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My little brother who is 10 has adhd and when he was younger he tried ridillin which is kind of like stratera but stratera is more recent but when he took it he lost his appetite and he was already tiny because he has a fast metabolism, i would recommend Concerta it is what he takes now and he stays calm the whole day, we give it to him at about 7:00 and it lasts till 7:00 that night, so talk to your doctor about concerta instead because stratera could give him a loss of appetite...let me know how it goes
2007-02-02 04:10:02
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answer #2
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answered by tori 1
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I'm 17 years old and I have ADD. While it isn't quite ADHD, it still is "fixed" the same way. The best thing for you to do is not to see a doctor. Take her to a physiologist how will actually diagnose her. Doctors are paid extra money by companies to diagnose people and give them their products.
But to answer your question directly. I take vitamins. Ginko Biloba, B6, B12, and other vitamins can be used to get your brain going correctly, and in 50% of cases can help the issue at hand. Sometimes, stronger or prescription meds are the right way to go, but don't you want to try other things before you jump straight to over the counter drugs?
As I said... See a physiologist to help her out. It isn't that she has mental issues, but they are trained to help with issues such as this and will be able to help you find a good medicine for your daughter.
2007-02-02 04:23:40
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answer #3
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answered by guitarmusicswim 1
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whether or not your son might desire to be on medicine, that's exceedingly irrelevant for his instructor to be encouraging it. she would be able to have her private opinion, yet she isn't qualified to diagnose ADHD and he or she is rarely qualified to be sure whether or not a infant desires medicine. I definitely have been interior the particular guidance field for some years; that's only not ok for a instructor to be giving enter on medical themes. the actuality is that your infant could be eligible for numerous accomodations the two by having an IEP or a 504 plan. i could examine the two. If he have been my infant, i could probable opt to inspect coming up a plan together with his instructors that would desire to be designed to artwork on his interest themes. there are multiple interventions that the instructor might desire to enforce in an attempt to assist your son, and whether she likes it or not, she is had to purpose them. it is going to be a collaborative attempt between you, the instructor, the administration, the psychologist, and so on... And sorry to assert it, even nevertheless it is not approrpriate for her to be dumping the accountability fullyyt on your lap - she is the instructor, she might desire to be experienced to deal with this. If I have been you, i could ask to establish a gathering along with her and the college administration. in case you come to a determination on not doing the medicine, i could make that sparkling from the commencing up. lower back, it is not the function of everyone on the college to talk medicine with you. it rather is a medical concern. however the college is legally obligated to discover a thank you to assist your son be triumphant - medicine or no medicine.
2016-09-28 08:01:05
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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well im 15 and I have ADHD. I have to take two bottles of meds. this treatment i am on is Adderall and Adderall XR. the reason why i am on two bottles of treatment is because i have Severe Hyperactiving. which mean i get hyper very much. I been on it for like a year. its help me a lots. its improve my attention, my hyper, my orgaized sometimes. if your child have effect on that med then get your child to be on another med cause if you don't it can be serious death threating.
2007-02-02 07:57:26
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answer #5
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answered by alamoleyanet 1
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We are just in the process of changing from Strattera to Concerta. The one good thing about Strattera is that its not a stimulant. That's just about it for my child and for other children - I've asked. We used Ritalin before Strattera. The key benefit of Concerta is, I believe, that it is a sustained release medication. Five is pretty young but you have to give medication but you have to think of his education experience overall. Good luck to you.
2007-02-02 05:11:41
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answer #6
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answered by firstyearbabyboomer 4
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my nease takes it but it dont work. it makes them sleepy, decreace in there apptite.
2007-02-02 04:19:11
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I use it...it makes my appite go completely away and caused me to loose weight.sometimes even stomach aches and head aches it doen't work for me but I'm not 5 so I dunno
2007-02-02 04:08:24
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answer #8
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answered by ChayBaby TTC#1 2
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