Children With ADHD May Benefit From Dietary Changes

Share it now

26 Apr 2012 Medical News Today Press Release

ADHD Diet Information

Together with child and adolescent psychiatrists, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have just completed an extensive report which reviews the studies which have been done so far on the significance of diet for children and young people with ADHD. The report shows that there are potential benefits in changing the diets of children with ADHD, but that key knowledge in the area is still lacking.

The comprehensive report covers the scientific literature on the significance of diet for children with ADHD: "Our conclusion is that more research is required in the area. There is a lot to suggest that by changing their diet, it is possible to improve the condition for some ADHD children," says professor in paediatric nutrition Kim Fleischer Michaelsen from the Department of Human Nutrition at the Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Copenhagen, who is heading the study.

Professor Kim Fleischer stresses that more research is needed: "Several of the studies show, for example, that fatty acids from fatty fish moderate the symptoms. Other studies detect no effect. Elimination diets are also promising. These look at whether there is anything in the diet which the children cannot consume without adverse side effects. However, we still lack knowledge about which children with ADHD benefit from dietary changes, how positive the effect is in the long term and what the changes mean for children's health." Dietary changes not beneficial for everyone

The report shows that not all ADHD children benefit from changes to their diet, and that there are still many unknown factors. Tine Houmann, a consultant at the Centre for Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, says: "There are different types of ADHD, and the disturbance is probably due to both genetic and environmental factors. We know that children with ADHD react very differently to both medication and dietary changes. We therefore need to study which children benefit from dietary changes, and whether we can identify genetic or environmental factors that can predict this."

Bigger studies needed

The experts hope that, by acquiring more knowledge on the subject, it is possible to reduce the use of medication and instead develop special dietary advice for the children:

"It is promising that many research results indicate that dietary changes can help some ADHD children. However, it is crucial that bigger studies on dietary changes are conducted on children with ADHD to see how effective this is and how long the benefits last," says Kim Fleischer Michaelsen, while stressing that parents should always seek professional advice before changing their children's diet.

References:
The report (only available in Danish) is financed by the Danish Ministry of Social Affairs and Integration, which wanted a detailed review of the literature within this area.
University of Copenhagen

Citations:
Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

MLA
University of Copenhagen. "Children With ADHD May Benefit From Dietary Changes." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 26 Apr. 2012. Web.
2 May. 2012.
APA
University of Copenhagen. (2012, April 26). "Children With ADHD May Benefit From Dietary Changes." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/244558.php.

Please note: If no author information is provided, the source is cited instead.

Any medical information published on this website is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional. For more information, please read our terms and conditions. End.

See our ADHD Diet at http://adhddiet.info

Douglas Cowan, Psy.D., M.S. is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Tehachapi, CA who has been a skillful counselor to children, teens, and adults helping them to overcome ADHD, find relief for depression or anxiety, and solve other problems in life since 1989. He served on the medical advisory board to the company that makes Attend and Extress from 1997 through 2011, and he is the Editor of the ADHD Information Library online resource. His weekly ADHD Newsletter goes out to 9,500 families. Visit his website at http://DouglasCowan.me for more information on achieving greater health, personal growth, Christ-centered spirituality, stress management, parenting skills, ADHD, working out the stresses of being a care-giver to elderly parents and also being a parent to teenagers, or finding greater meaning in retirement years.

Share it now

Uncaught exception thrown in shutdown function.

PDOException: SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 11 database disk image is malformed: INSERT INTO {watchdog} (uid, type, message, variables, severity, link, location, referer, hostname, timestamp) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?); Array ( [0] => 0 [1] => php [2] => %type: !message in %function (line %line of %file). [3] => a:6:{s:5:"%type";s:19:"Deprecated function";s:8:"!message";s:83:"The each() function is deprecated. This message will be suppressed on further calls";s:9:"%function";s:27:"_drupal_shutdown_function()";s:5:"%file";s:47:"/home/devnew/public_html/includes/bootstrap.inc";s:5:"%line";i:3200;s:14:"severity_level";i:7;} [4] => 7 [5] => [6] => http://newideas.net/book/export/html/251 [7] => [8] => 44.210.240.31 [9] => 1711707790 ) in dblog_watchdog() (line 157 of /home/devnew/public_html/modules/dblog/dblog.module).