September 2007
Pediatric Ritalin use may affect developing brain
Use of the attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug Ritalin by young children may
cause long‑term changes in the developing brain, suggests a new study of
very young rats by a research team at Weill
Cornell Medical College in New York
City.
The study is among the
first to probe the effects of Ritalin (methylphenidate) on the
neurochemistry of the developing brain. Between two and eighteen percent of
American children are thought to be affected by ADHD, and Ritalin, a
stimulant similar to amphetamine and cocaine, remains one of the most
prescribed drugs for the behavioral disorder.
"The changes we saw in
the brains of treated rats occurred in areas strongly linked to higher
executive functioning, addiction and appetite, social relationships and
stress. These alterations gradually disappeared over time once the rats no
longer received the drug," noted the study's senior author Dr. Teresa
Milner, professor of neuroscience at Weill
Cornell Medical College.
The findings, specially
highlighted in the Journal of Neuroscience, suggest that doctors must
be very careful in their diagnosis of ADHD before prescribing Ritalin.
That's because the brain changes noted in the study might be helpful in
battling the disorder but harmful if given to youngsters with healthy brain
chemistry, Milner said.
In the study, week‑old
male rat pups were given injections of Ritalin twice a day during their more
physically active nighttime phase. The rats continued receiving the
injections up until they were 35 days old.
"Relative to human
lifespan, this would correspond to very early stages of brain development,"
explained Jason Gray, a graduate student in the Program of Neuroscience and
lead author of the study. "That's earlier than the age at which most
children now receive Ritalin, although there are clinical studies underway
that are testing the drug in 2‑ and 3‑year olds."
The relative doses used
were at the very high end of what a human child might be prescribed, Milner
noted. Also, the rats were injected with the drug, rather than fed Ritalin
orally, because this method allowed the dose to be metabolized in a way that
more closely mimicked its metabolism in humans.
The researchers first
looked at behavioral changes in the treated rats. They discovered that ‑‑
just as happens in humans ‑‑ Ritalin use was linked to a decline in weight.
"That correlates with the weight loss sometimes seen in patients," Milner
observed.
The researchers also
used high‑tech methods to track changes in both the chemical neuroanatomy
and structure of the treated rats' brains at postnatal day 35, which is
roughly equivalent to the adolescent period.
"These brain tissue
findings revealed Ritalin‑associated changes in four main areas," Dr. Milner
says. "First, we noticed alterations in brain chemicals such as
catecholamines and norepinephrine in the rats' prefrontal cortex ‑‑ a part
of the mammalian brain responsible for higher executive thinking and
decision‑making. There were also significant changes in catecholamine
function in the hippocampus, a center for memory and learning."
Treatment‑linked
alterations were also noted in the striatum ‑‑ a brain region known to be
key to motor function ‑‑ and in the hypothalamus, a center for appetite,
arousal and addictive behaviors.
Milner stressed that,
at this point in their research, it's just too early to say whether the
changes noted in the Ritalin‑exposed brain would be of either benefit or
harm to humans.
"One thing to remember
is that these young animals had normal, healthy brains," she says. "In
ADHD‑affected brains ‑‑ where the neurochemistry is already somewhat awry or
the brain might be developing too fast ‑‑ these changes might help 'reset'
that balance in a healthy way. On the other hand, in brains without ADHD,
Ritalin might have a more negative effect. We just don't know yet."
One thing was clear: 3
months after the rats stopped receiving Ritalin, the animals' neurochemistry
largely had resolved back to the pre‑treatment state.
"That's encouraging,
and supports the notion that this drug therapy may be best used over a
relatively short period of time, to be replaced or supplemented with
behavioral therapy," Dr. Milner says. "We're concerned about longer‑term
use. It's unclear from this study whether Ritalin might leave more lasting
changes, especially if treatment were to continue for years. In that case,
it is possible that chronic use of the drug would alter brain chemistry and
behavior well into adulthood."
Sources:
New York‑Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center/Weill Cornell
Medical College, July 19, 2007; "Methylphenidate Administration to Juvenile
Rats Alters Brain Areas Involved in Cognition, Motivated Behaviors,
Appetite, and Stress," J. Neurosci., Jul 2007; 27: 7196‑7207.