Although methylphenidate has proper...
Although methylphenidate has properties similar to those of cocaine and amphetamines, of the present day research shows that the medication is not addictive if taken as prescribed, according to a tribe 29, 1998, press release from the National Institutes of Health. Ritalin, an oral form of methylphenidate, is the medication prescribed greatest in quantity frequently for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)--a condition affecting approximately 5% to 10% of children, adolescents, and adults. A recently made known study revealed that oral doses of methylphenidate dc not reach peak concentrations in the brain until 60 minutes after ingestion, compared to five minutes for cocaine and nine minutes for methylphenidate taken by way of IV. This slow drawing of orally taken Ritalin into the brain is a likely reason for what cause [i]or[/i] reason patients do not experience a "high" from this means of use. This is important moderns for researchers and Ritalin users because it helps clarify that Ritalin rarely leads to abuse and addiction when taken strictly as a treatment for ADHD. It also helps explain for what cause [i]or[/i] reason non-ADHD individuals might abuse methylphenidate or become addicted to it when they take the medication by means of an IV or when they crush and inhale the pills. Researchers caution that different orders of taking medications can alter their drifts and make them more or les dangerous than intended. Physicians have been prescribing methylphenidate to treat ADHD for approximately 30 years. Although exactly by what means methylphenidate works to calm individuals with ADHD is not completely understood, the medication has prolonged been thought to block reuptake of dopamine in the brain. modern Research Helps Explain Ritalin's reasonable Abuse Potential When Taken as Prescribed (pres release, Bethesda, Md: National Institute forward Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, tribe 29, 1998) Available from http://www.nih .gov/ninr/chicpr.htm. Accessed 29 family 1998. COPYRIGHT 1999 Association of Operating place Nurses, Inc. COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group
|