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ATTENTION DEFICIT AND HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER (ADHD) BY TERRY S. FRIEDMANN, M. D., A.B.H.M.

Introduction: Attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder is one of the most frequently diagnosed disorders in young children and teenagers. Several million children are reported to be treated for ADHD; however, some school classrooms report that as high as 30% of the students are being treated for this illness. The child is normally diagnosed with ADHD between the ages of six and twelve years of age1. The symptoms are usually: Inattention - Having a shorter than usual attention span and can be easily distracted. Impulsivity - Not being able to control impulses. Hyperactivity - Periodic over activity. The diagnosis of ADHD is made by several methods: medical history and physical exam and/or tests, both verbal and written. It is not uncommon for the diagnosis to be made by the parents and/or educational personnel, such as teachers and school nurses. This is usually the result of close observation and monitoring of the child's behavior and performance1. Many children diagnosed as having ADHD perform poorly in school due to their inability to focus their attention and stay on task. Once diagnosed, treatment can be broad and varied. The present approaches include medication, behavior management, social skills training, counseling, and a holistic approach. Included under the broad category of holistic are biofeedback, homeopathy, diet restriction, herbal medicines, and other natural substances. Not enough research has been obtained relative to these holistic modalities. One of the modalities, which has been researched and has shown some promise, is food restriction. It appears that both restricting dietary sugar and food chemical additives have helped a limited number of children who have ADHD. The common treatment in our society for ADHD is usually the drugs Ritalin, chemically named methylphenidate, or to a lesser extent the drug Dexedrine, chemically named dextroamphetamine3. Ritalin is said to control the symptoms in 70% of the cases. However, neither medication sustains any healing properties. Unfortunately, both drugs have been shown to have similar side effects on the brain, mind, and behavior including conditions such as psychosis, mania, drug abuse, and addiction. Ritalin can cause permanent neurological tics and also growth retardation in children by disrupting the cycles of growth hormone secretion by the pituitary gland. Ritalin, when ground up and inhaled, is being used as a recreational drug. It is being obtained illegally with and without a prescription, and reports indicate that it could present a problem of addiction. There is also evidence that occasionally it eventually leads to the use of more serious narcotics. In this study, I have elected to use natural substances as a treatment for ADHD in children. The substances are essential oils. Essential oils are aromatic, volatile liquids distilled from shrubs, trees, roots, bushes, seeds, and flowers2. The oils, made up of resin and plant extracts, are the most powerful part of the plant2. The essential oils are extracted from the plant or tree by various methods. The most effective method is by the process of distillation wherein the plant is heated at specific temperatures, pressures, and time to best separate the oil from the plant structure without fracturing the chemical constituents. Essential oils contain hundreds of different chemical compounds, each having specific properties and actions. When these essential oils are inhaled, they not only provide exquisite fragrances, but they have also proven to

be able to produce physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual well-being of people since the beginning of time2. Records dating back to 4500 BC describe the use of balsamic aromatic substances for religious rituals and medical conditions2. The chemical constituents of essential oils have been compared to human blood for they have similar properties; that of immune and nervous system stimulation, being antimicrobial in nature, of containing nutrients and oxygen, and of stimulating the regeneration of all tissues. One of the reasons for this is the way by which the oils are absorbed by the body. When the essential oil is inhaled, the micro droplets are carried to the limbic system of the brain, which is that portion that is the processing center for reason, emotion, and smell, and to the hypothalamus, which is the hormone command center. The essential oil micro droplets are also carried to the lungs where they enter the circulatory system. Some essential oils contain high levels of the chemical constituents sesquiterpenes, which can dramatically increase oxygenation and activity in the brain2. Other essential oils because of their unique constituents tend to have a greater role in hormonal secretion and in the balance of mood and emotions. Method: Subjects: The study was performed with children, ages six to fourteen, who were previously diagnosed as having ADHD. None of them were being treated with medication at the time nor to my knowledge had any of them even taken medication specifically for this disorder. In the study, there were sixteen controls who received no treatment and eighteen subjects who were treated by one of three essential oils. There were six girls and twelve boys in the treatment group and five girls and eleven boys in the control group. They all lived in the Denver greater metropolitan area and were recruited either through advertisements in local newspapers or by word of mouth. They were not financially or otherwise reimbursed for their participation in the study. Equipment: The equipment used in testing the subjects was a real-time electro-encephalograph (EEG). This measures electrical impulses in the brain by placing small sensors called electrodes on a persons scalp to detect the electrical impulses moving through the brain. The real-time EEG measures all major areas of the brain and gives instant feedback. The instruments used in the study were the J and J-I-330-Beta-Theta and the Neurodata 3000. Although the equipment is manufactured by two different sources, their operation is essentially the same in its measurement of the brain waves. Equipment Technique: While the real-time EEG equipment is capable of measuring all the brain waves, only two parameter types were measured, beta and theta waves. The beta brain waves, whose frequency is 13-30 cycles per second, reflect those waves that are being produced by the brain when the subject is alert and/or performing a task. For example, if one were mentally performing a test, such as deriving a solution to a mathematical problem, then the brain would be functioning in such a manner as to express a large amount of beta waves. The theta waves, whose frequency is 4-8 cycles per second, on the other hand reflect the brain in the state of sleep or daydreaming, but awake. Therefore, we would tend to see a large amount of theta waves during these states. Consequently, if we measured the ratio of beta waves to theta waves, we would then have criteria for knowing if the brain is functioning primarily in a beta state, meaning alertness, or a theta state, indicating lack of focus on the tasks at hand. Obviously, a beta-theta ratio is a significant tool, which can be used to measure the kind of brain function, which we are interested in knowing. One fact observed regarding the brain waves measured by the real-time EEG is that initially there was a difference between the waves of normal children compared to ADHD children. While brain waves from normal children were high in amounts of beta waves and low in the amounts of theta waves during waking hours, the reverse was true in the

children diagnosed with ADHD. In other words, ADHD children had higher amounts of theta waves as compared to beta waves. Experimental Design and Procedures: When the subjects initially entered the study, they were administered a T.O.V.A. test. The T.O.V.A. interpretation evaluates attention to stimuli in comparison to the norms, thereby measuring the degree of impulsivity, which is one of the symptoms of ADHD. This then detects the possible presence of ADHD. The results, compared to the normal same-gender, same-age, and average I.Q. group, are reported as standard deviations and standard scores. Each subject was then evaluated on the real-time EEG. Their beta and theta brain waves were measured and their beta-theta ratios recorded. Next, the subjects were randomly divided into three different groups with six persons per group. For each of the three groups, one of three essential oils was randomly selected. The intent was to administer that oil to the subject. The first of these oils is Cedrus atlantica, common name Cedarwood; chosen because of its high concentration of sesquiterpenes making up 50% of its constituents, which improves oxygenation of the cells of the brain. The second oil is Vetiveria zizanioides, common name Vetiver, whose action calms and balances the nervous system and at the same time stimulates the circulatory system. The third oil is Lavandula angustifolia, common name Lavender, which has both a sedative as well as a stimulating action. It sedates part of the brain at the same time stimulating the limbic region of the brain. Each subject in the study was given a glass bottle of the appropriate essential oil to administer at home. Treatment: Six subjects were given Cedarwood oil, six were given Vetiver oil, and six were given Lavender oil. The subjects were asked to inhale the oil three times a day, using a technique of holding the open bottle next to the nostrils and taking three deep inhalations. The essential oil was inhaled daily for a period of thirty days. At the end of thirty days, the subjects were asked to return to the clinic where they retested on the real-time EEG. The beta-theta ratios were again recorded. Last, they were once again administered the T.O.V.A. test. Results: Overview of Analysis Procedure: For each essential oil, the initial beta-theta ratios were compared with the post-treatment tests. The mean scores were compared. Next, the control data was compared in order to find any change from the first to the second real-time EEG. The next test was the comparison of the overall T.O.V.A. test scores, both pre-treatment and post-treatment. Then the controls were compared for any change from first to second T.O.V.A. test. The last comparison was between the pre-testing and post-testing changes of the treated groups compared to pre-testing and post-testing of subjects who were not treated, or controls. Treatment Outcome: The final numbers of subjects in the study shrank from thirty-four at the beginning of the study to thirty at the end of the study. Four of the treated group dropped out of the study, leaving the totals of each of the three groups of four subjects in the Vetiver group, four subjects in the Lavender group, and no change (maintained at six) in the Cedarwood group. The reasons for the non-compliance were varied from one subject who developed a skin rash to another subject who moved out of the state during the study. The analyses revealed a significant improvement in the pre- and post-treatment Vetiver essential oil group. The improvement was 32%. A similar result was seen with the pre- and post-

treatment of the Cedarwood essential oil group. The Lavender treated group showed no improvement between pre- and post-treatment testing. When compared with the control group, the Vetiver treated group's improvement was statistically significant. However, because of the relatively small sample and the extremely low-test scores in the pretreated real-time EEG study of the Cedarwood group, the statistical analysis was skewed. What this means is that the results showing the improvement was not statistically significant when analyzed. This was true even though the improvement of the test results of pre-treatment compared to post-treatment subjects was quite notable in a positive way. The T.O.V.A. pre- and post-testing results revealed an overall improvement, indicating a reduction of the symptoms of ADHD. The data is provided in the following tables: TABLE 1 Variable N Mean Treatment = Cedarwood PRE 6 52.1666667 POST 6 84.8333333 Change 6 32.6666667 Treatment = Lavender PRE 4 80.7500000 POST 4 85.5000000 Change 4 4.7500000 Treatment = Vetiver PRE 4 66.7500000 POST 4 98.7500000 Change 4 32.0000000 Treatment = zControl PRE 16 61.8750000 POST 16 76.0000000 Change 16 14.1250000 Std. Dev. 10.4578519 18.5193592 19.6943308 18.2460041 9.0369611 22.3662692 12.6852933 1.5000000 13.2916014 16.6448190 15.9874951 17.5911910 Minimum 39.0000000 56.0000000 12.0000000 64.0000000 77.0000000 -21.0000000 54.0000000 97.0000000 14.0000000 38.0000000 32.0000000 -15.0000000 Maximum 66.0000000 100.0000000 60.0000000 98.0000000 96.0000000 30.0000000 84.0000000 100.0000000 46.0000000 92.0000000 99.0000000 49.0000000

Statistical data compiled by Dennis Eggett, Ph.D., Dept. of Statistics, Center For Statistical Research, Brigham Young University.

TABLE 2 CONTROL 95% Confidence Mean T.O.V.A. Pre-Test Score Mean T.O.V.A. Post-Test Score Mean Change in T.O.V.A. Score TREATMENT 95% Confidence Mean T.O.V.A. Pre-Test Score Mean T.O.V.A. Post-Test Score Mean Change in T.O.V.A. Score Mean 63.0% 75.1% 12.1% Mean 64.9% 89.5% 24.7% Interval 55.0%, 70.9% 67.6%, 82.5% 4.8%, 19.4% Interval 56.2%, 73.5% 82.7%, 96.4% 14.0%, 35.4% Std. Dev. 18.2% 17.0% 16.6% Std. Dev. 17.1% 13.5% 21.1% N 20 20 20 N 15 15 15 4

Discussion: This study examined the effectiveness of essential oils in the treatment of ADHD diagnosed children from the ages of six to fourteen years. Treatment outcome results reveal that the essential oil of Vetiver improves the brain activity and reduces the symptoms in ADHD diagnosed subjects. Similar results were found with the essential oil Cedarwood, although not statistically significant. This lack of significance could be the result of the relatively small number of subjects in this study. The Lavender group showed no apparent improvement after the treatment program. The improvement of the subjects who were treated with the Vetiver and Cedarwood would have been greater had they not been compared to the change of the control group after their second testing was performed. Note that in Table 1, the control group had some improvement with regards to the betatheta brain wave ratio. The control group, however, showed a lesser improvement then did the treatment group. This overall improvement in both groups obviously reflects the ability for the subjects to learn the function of the real-time EEG, thereby improving their brain wave response the second time that they were connected to the equipment. In spite of this minor improvement in the control group, which represented learned familiarity, when statistically analyzed and compared to the improvement of the subjects who were treated with the essential oils, certainly in the case of Vetiver, the subjects scored much better in their post-testing versus pre-testing. In addition, I received several letters from parents of the ADHD children stating that their behavior at home had improved for the better. In several cases, they also stated that school educators informed them that their performance was observed to improve in the classroom. The report cards in some of the subjects had reflected this improvement as well. Since these results were not included in the design of the study, they will not be included here, but is only mentioned as an unexpected improvement in the treated ADHD diagnosed children. In summary, based on this study, I would not hesitate to recommend the use of the essential oil Vetiver in the treatment of children diagnosed as having ADHD. I would even consider using the essential oil Cedarwood in situations where Vetiver was not available or other cases in which Vetiver was not appropriate. Certainly, the essential oil Vetiver proved to be the treatment of choice between the three different oils used in this study. 1. References Diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: Summary (August 1999). Technical Review: Number 3 (AHCPR Publication No. 99-0049). Rockville, MD: Agency for Health Care Policy and Research. Also available: http://www.ahcpr.gov/clinic/adhdsutr.htm (accessed: August 26, 2000). Essential oils desk reference compiled by Essential Science Publishing. Second Edition. 2001. Elia, J., et al. (1999). Treatment of attention-deficit-hyperactivity disorder. New England Journal of Medicine, 340(10): 780-788.

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