Why is ADHD Treated with Stimulants?

The Little-Known Science Behind ADHD

Have you, like many other people, ever wondered why ADHD, a mental condition characterized by hyperactivity, should be prescribed stimulant medications as a treatment? If so, you're not alone. There are many who look at this common treatment and think it must be counterproductive, that
 a stimulant medication should make symptoms like hyperactivity and lack of focus worse. This understanding is often cited as one of the prime arguments for why ADHD is somehow a myth concocted by the pharmaceutical companies for the sake of earning a fortune pedaling unneeded drugs.

But the fact is, there's a very good reason why stimulants medications can be effective at treating ADHD, and that reason requires understanding just what, neurologically speaking, ADHD consists of.

In all of our brains, there is a portion that deals with matters of impulse suppression and control. It is this center that gives us the ability to focus on things that don't interest us, to be patient enough to do dull things like stand in long lines, to hold still without fidgeting, and to remember to take care of chores, tasks and organizational duties which we know are important. It makes us less likely to get so absorbed in engaging activities that we lose all track of time and keeps us from getting so easily caught up in strong emotions.

But for those of us with ADHD, there is, for some reason, a shortage of electrical activity in these portions of the brain. For us, it takes a great deal more willpower to do things we find tedious or unpleasant. Our emotions distract us hugely, and we have more trouble setting them aside. Daily chores and tasks slip our minds because our brains are reluctant to think about things we don't have a high emotional stake in. This same deficiency is what causes our brains to generate more creative ideas than we know what to do with, and to be constantly carried away with excitement about each new one (while forgetting all the old ones).

 
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Thanks. I'm not really sure what point you're making regarding the drugs, exactly. That there's a fine line between responsible use and abuse? Well, sure. As for the stigma most people attach to illegal drugs just because they're illegal, that doesn't really mean much to an anarchist...

Posted on 08/12/2008 at 9:08:18 AM

"a successful medication makes everything that's hard for us suddenly, blissfully easy," Someone could use those very words as an argument for an illegal drug. Or legal ones, such as alcohol lowering inhibitions, therefore making social interactions blissfully easy. I could go on, but you get the point. I enjoyed the article though.

Posted on 08/11/2008 at 10:08:52 PM

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