Single-Dose Drug Is Approved For ADHD

Published: 2 August 2000 y., Wednesday
The Food and Drug Administration said it has approved Concerta for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Between 4 percent and 12 percent of school-age children – an average of about 2.5 million, mostly boys – are believed to have ADHD. Symptoms include short attention span, impulsive behavior and difficulty focusing and sitting still. Methylphenidate – best known under the name Ritalin – often is prescribed to increase a child's alertness. But current forms of the drug require two or three doses daily, often requiring youngsters to break up their school days with visits to the nurse's office. The new drug lasts 12 hours, which will avoid in-school and after-school dosing. Concerta was developed by Crescendo Pharmaceuticals Corp. and will be manufactured and marketed by ALZA Corp. of Mountain View, Calif. The new form of the drug will eliminate the stigma of taking a drug in school and the problems of getting it to the school nurse or interrupting after-school programs or practice, said Dan Swisher, vice president of ALZA.
Šaltinis: altavista.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

A Key Transit Route

Drug Trade Earns $10Bln per Year, Top Official Says more »

China takes urgent steps to curb AIDS spread

The State Council, Chinese cabinet, in a circular publicized Sunday admitted that AIDS epidemic is still quickly spreading in the country and a series of urgent measures must be taken to change the situation more »

Nasa grounds its 'Einstein' probe

The probe will test whether space-time can be distorted by Earth's rotation more »

Russian, American and Dutch astronaut to blast off on April 19

Three astronauts will blast off for the International Space Station (ISS) on April 19 more »

WHO cites drug-resistant TB hot spots

Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a particular problem in parts of the former Soviet Union and China, but data is lacking for other potential hot spots more »

Drug-related HIV/AIDS cases on the rise in south

Injecting drug use, fuelled by illicit drug trafficking, is increasing the number of HIV/AIDS cases in southern Uzbekistan more »

The fastest-growing Aids epidemic

Aids epidemic threatens western Europe, warns UN more »

AIDS in Russia and other former Soviet republics

HIV growth rates in Estonia, Russia and Ukraine among world's highest more »

Study Finds New Form of Mad Cow Disease

Italian scientists have found a second form of mad cow disease that more closely resembles the human Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease than the usual cow form of the illness more »

The WHO investigation

Human-to-human transmission of bird flu may cause death of 2 Vietnamese more »