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Home » Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 27 No. 10
CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY 

What the Future Holds

By David W. Dunn, MD | October 15, 2010

This is both an exciting and challenging time to be a child and adolescent psychiatrist. New findings from basic science, genetics, and imaging are changing our knowledge of childhood psychopathology. This Special Report discusses current developments in diagnosis, treatments, and problems for children and adolescents.

DSM-5 promises some modifications in diagnostic criteria. A major problem is the classification of children with rages, irritability, and emotional lability. Do these children have bipolar disorder, mood dysregulation, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional conduct disorder/conduct disorder, or a new diagnosis—temper dysregulation disorder with dysphoria? We are still waiting for combination neuropsychological, neuroimaging, and genetic studies to provide validation of a single disorder or multiple disorders currently called juvenile bipolar disorders. The proposed DSM-5 will eliminate Asperger disorder and pervasive developmental disorders and create a single autistic disorder with 2 criteria: social and communication deficits and fixed interests and repetitive behavior.

(MORE: Keys to Success in ADHD Treatment)

Treatment issues remain important. Questions have been raised about suicidal ideation from antiepileptic drugs, just as warnings were issued for antidepressants. There has been a significant increase in the use of atypical antipsychotics, particularly in younger children with disruptive behavior. There is a need to balance the benefits of reducing aggression with the cost of weight gain and possibly long-term metabolic disturbances. In this Special Report, the importance of prevention, psychotherapy and counseling, and family involvement is emphasized. We know these interventions can be very helpful, but we need to improve access to treatments and convince payers that these services can be economical over time.

The environment in which children develop is changing. Although there may be positive applications of some new technologies, child and adolescent psychiatrists need to be concerned about the potential harmful effects of screen media, including both television and video games, on vulnerable populations. Early studies are assessing the ability of computerized training programs to improve cognitive skills. Unfortunately, there is a proliferation of untested and unvalidated programs being marketed with promises of making children with ADHD, autism, traumatic brain injury, and learning disorders smarter and academically more successful. Child psychiatrists should demand data demonstrating efficacy before families and school spend inordinate sums on computerized cognitive training.

Advances in research are providing new techniques for understanding child and adolescent psychopathology. Structural imaging has been enhanced by new techniques, such as diffusion tensor imaging that delineates major neural fiber tracks. Functional MRI can assess cerebral cortical neural activity and is being used routinely by researchers to assess brain function in a variety of childhood disorders. Important progress is being made in the understanding of e-genetics and the gene-environment interaction. There are still no genetic tests for the common childhood psychopathologies, but progress is being made in pharmacogenetics and potential treatments. As an example, new knowledge of the effect of tuberous sclerosis genes on the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway has resulted in a potential therapy using rapamycin, an inhibitor of mTOR, to reduce tumor growth and possibly improve cognitive and behavioral function in children with tuberous sclerosis accompanied by epilepsy, autistic disorder, or intellectual disability. Encouraging students to consider a career in research and ensuring adequate funding for research are essential for improving the future care of children and adolescents.

 

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by Robert Peers | November 07, 2010 5:55 AM EST

What the future really holds: 1. Mandatory correction of low vitamin E levels in refined seed oils-- this will eliminate ADHD (caused by gestational exposure), and also oil-aggravated ADHD, anxiety, autism etc., preventing excess temper, ODD, childhood depression, antisocial behaviour etc.. With brain-ozidizing oils out of the way, fish oil (perhaps with choline and uridine--below) may reverse ADHD symptoms sufficiently to render present ADHD drugs obsolete: nutritional neural plasticity to replace outmoded pharmacology. 2. A national pregnancy supervision programme, designed to keep maternal diets low in saturated fats--this will prevent anxiety disorder and anxiety-based over-eating and depression; and will restrict autism, benign unipolar hypomania and schizotypy to their respective minimal phenotypes, which we can live with. 3. Widespread adoption by parents of a simple brain-boosting diet, to improve children's IQ: low in fat (which oxidizes the brain [B Culver] and impairs dendritic branching [P Wainwright]); rich in fish oil, choline [eggs, wheatgerm] and uridine [beets, broccoli] to improve synaptic count; and also rich in Inositol [grains, nuts, legumes, citrus, cantaloupe], a versatile carbohydrate with anxiolytic and anti-ageing properties, which boosts cellular energy, neurotrophic factors and mental alertness (as seen in calorically restricted test animals).

Also in this Special Report

What the Future Holds

Update on Autism

The Impact of Screen Media on Children

Keys to Success in ADHD Treatment






 
TOPIC INDEX

Addiction Medicine
Alzheimer Disease
Anxiety Disorders
ADHD
Bipolar Disorder
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
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Depression
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