ADHD requires timely diagnosis and treatment, and maintaining a positive mood is crucial to prevent the condition from worsening.
Understanding the correct treatment for ADHD children can help them better cope with this condition.
Introduce readers to the healing methods from traditional medicine, such as massage, cupping, scraping, steaming, moxibustion, hand therapy, foot therapy, ear therapy, medication, plasters, dietary therapy, as well as modern medical approaches like exercise, music, and psychological care. This provides patients with more self-treatment options, highlighting their naturalness and practicality. It makes the content easy to read, understand, and master, allowing for self-treatment at home. This fully utilizes the patients’ subjective initiative and opens up a new horizon for self-recovery.
This article introduces the medication options and dietary precautions for 12-year-old children with ADHD.
Discussing medication options for treating ADHD in children, as well as how to improve symptoms through the supplementation of specific trace elements.
Adolescent ADHD is associated with a deficiency in trace elements, particularly iron and zinc, which may affect a child’s brain development and intellectual growth.
ADHD is related to diet, and avoiding excessive intake of certain amino acids and sugars may help improve symptoms.
Do not administer tranquilizers to children with ADHD to prevent lead, mercury, and other intoxications. Avoid allowing children to come into contact with paint and excessive food intake. Ensure toys do not contain excessive lead. Reduce excessive learning pressure at home and school, make correct demands based on the child’s actual situation, and accompany appropriate physical exercise. Pay attention to maintaining adequate sleep and arranging for reasonable study. Prevent certain adverse factors during pregnancy, such as maternal viral infection and maternal illness. Prevent causes of perinatal brain damage, such as emergencies, delayed delivery, intrauterine asphyxia, and intracranial hemorrhage, and monitor high-risk children who have already appeared. Do not give children spicy seasonings (such as pepper or black pepper), and eat less food rich in methyl salicylate, such as tomatoes, apples, and oranges.
Treatment Recommendations for the Complications of Epilepsy and ADHD
Management Methods for Children with ADHD