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The Aggressive Child:. Oppositional Defiant and Conduct Disorders. Michael Kisicki, M.D. Seattle Children’s Hospital Echo Glen Children’s Center University of Washington, Department of Psychiatry. Main Points. Safety Assess and treat comorbid conditions
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The Aggressive Child: Oppositional Defiant and Conduct Disorders Michael Kisicki, M.D. Seattle Children’s Hospital Echo Glen Children’s Center University of Washington, Department of Psychiatry PAL Program
Main Points Safety Assess and treat comorbid conditions Address risk factors and bolster strengths Behavioral interventions first Medications secondary and adjunctive PAL Program
Nature of Aggression • Development of contrary and aggressive behavior • Psychological factors • Environmental factors • Physiological factors • Determining pathologic PAL Program
Developmental Trajectory PAL Program From “Developmental Origins of Aggression” by Tremblay, Hartup and Archer (2005)
Developmental Trajectory PAL Program From “Developmental Origins of Aggression” by Tremblay, Hartup and Archer (2005)
Developmental Trajectory PAL Program From “Developmental Origins of Aggression” by Tremblay, Hartup and Archer (2005)
Development • Infants promote bonding with behavior • Anger expression by age 6 months • Toddlers show defiance as they individuate • Tantrums diminish in school age children • Social conformity progresses in elementary • Testing limits, debating, experimenting in early teens PAL Program
Physiology • Genetics • Autonomic nervous system • Endocrine • Neuroanatomy • Serotonin • Toxins PAL Program
Nature - Nurture PAL Program Caspi, et al 2002
Neuroanatomy • Orbito/frontal: reactive aggression, negative affective style, impulsivity • Temporal: unprovoked aggression • Amygdala: interpretation of social cues PAL Program
Distinguishing Pathologic • Safety • Variety of symptoms and settings • Proactive aggression and cruelty • Use of weapon • Contrary to social group • Behavior atypical for age PAL Program
Assessment PAL Program
SAFETY • Abuse, neglect • Presence of weapon • Past behavior • Use of drugs/alcohol • Acute psychiatric illness (mania, psychosis) • Suicide PAL Program
Treatment Focused History • When, how, what,? Focusing on modifiable variables • Hot or cold? • Time course, association with stressor? • Risk factors • Strengths • Information from multiple sources • Measures, scales (Vanderbilts, OAS) PAL Program
Individual Factors Family history (ADHD, DBD, PDD, mood) Temperament, affect dysregulation Reading, speech/language Social skills Prenatal, environmental toxic exposure PAL Program
Parenting Parental mental illness Low involvement High conflict Poor monitoring Harsh inconsistent discipline Physical punishment Lack of warmth and involvement Parental burn out PAL Program
Child Abuse Physical abuse and neglect predict APD, criminal behavior, violence Abused children have social processing deficits Sexual abuse victims of both genders develop DBD, girls have more internalizing Risk reduced when removed PAL Program
Peers Rejected and reinforced by pro-social peers Uneasy affirmation by anti-social peers Females more sensitive to rejection PAL Program
Neighborhood More predictive of DBD than any other psychopathology Public housing outweighs all protective factors Disorganization, drugs, adult criminals, racial prejudice, poverty, unemployment PAL Program
Oppositional Defiant Disorder Defiance, anger, quick temper, bullying, spitefulness, usually before 8 years of age Usually resolves, 1/3 develop conduct disorder High rate of comorbidity Irritability is a component (think about when considering Bipolar NOS) PAL Program
Conduct Disorder Repetitive + persistent, violates basic rights of others or societal norms Aggression, property destruction, theft, deceit, truancy Prognosis depends on age, aggression and social withdrawal Boys: higher prevalence, more persistence and aggression Girls: less persistent, more covert behavior and problematic relationships Less Aggression and more rights violations with age. PAL Program
Prevalence 5% of kids ODD: 2-16% of community, 50% of clinic CD: 1.5-3.4% of community adolescents, 30-50% in clinic Usually resolves, 1/3 of ODD develop CD Adult antisocial personality disorder: 2.6% Boys >> girls, unless you consider relational aggression PAL Program
Comorbid Disorders • ADHD, 10x the prevalence; inattention, impulsivity, hyperactivity. Vanderbilts. • MDD, 7x the prevalence; mood complaints, neurovegative symptoms. SMFQ. • Substance abuse, 4x the prevalence; by history, UA. CRAFFT (car, relax, alone, forget, friends, trouble) • PTSD, Autism, Bipolar PAL Program
Treatment Menu Education Treat co-morbid medical and psychiatric conditions Parenting support Psychotherapy Community/Multimodal services Medication PAL Program
Acute Agitation • Attention to your own demeanor, environment • Provide some sense of control, choices • Distractions, food • Medications (oral, risperidone liquid/Mtab) • Careful with benzos and Benadryl PAL Program
Education Drugs, toxins Parenting/abuse Parent mental health Learning problems Peers, community Safety precautions Available resources Communication PAL Program
Expert Opinion • 46 leading experts surveyed • 10 years of “ballooning” off-label use of antipsychotics • Decline in psychosocial interventions • Mismatch between research and clinical practice Martin & Leslie, 2003 PAL Program
Comorbidity ADHD: medication and parenting support +/- behavioral therapy Substance abuse: targeted treatment, motivational interviewing, consider residential Mood/Anxiety: individual therapy (CBT) +/- medication PAL Program
Psychotherapy Part of a broader program Problem solving, peer mediation Social skills Moral development Anger/assertiveness training PAL Program
Parenting Support Parent management training (PMT): effective across settings and overtime, but does not bring out of clinical range with ADHD Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT): clinically significant improvement with ODD. 1. Child directed interaction. 2. Parent directed Family Therapy has greater drop out than PMT PAL Program
Bibliotherapy 1-2-3 Magic (2004) by Thomas Phelan, PhD (multiple languages and video) Winning the Whining Wars, and other Skirmishes (1991) by Cynthia Whitham MSW The Difficult Child (2000) by Stanley Turicki, MD Parenting Your Out-of-Control Teenager by Scott Sells, PhD PAL Program
Parenting Positive reinforcement Balanced emotional valence Time outs PAL Program
Parenting (con’t) Response cost: withdrawing rewards Token economy Consistency of response Priorities and sharing responsibility PAL Program
Community Get Creative! Scouts, Boys and Girls Clubs, Big Brother/Sister, after school activities and sports, communal parenting Be careful of bringing together kids with ODD/CD More formal programs: treatment foster care, school-based programs, bullying programs Promotes social skills and supervision PAL Program
Multimodal Services Strongest evidence for actual therapeutic effect in Conduct disorder Foster care, juvenile justice, public mental health Multisystemic therapies (MST, FFT, FIT): family, peer, school, and neighborhood interventions plus behavior therapy, problem solving, +/- DBT skills PAL Program
School • Feeling more successful in school always helps behavior • Testing (learning, speech, language) • Accomodations • Special classroom • Social skills, problem solving, peer mediation PAL Program
Pharmacotherapy Target medication responsive diagnoses Covert, premeditated generally not responsive Meds should be adjunctive and secondary to behavioral interventions Most benign first, informed consent Quantify and track results (OAS) Stop one before starting second Assess compliance, all meds can be diverted PAL Program
ADHD + ODD/CD Treatment ADHD = ADHD+ODD in stimulant response Non-Stimulant medications not as consistent 11x the non-compliance with ODD Meds + parenting and/or behavioral therapy Combination therapy is better when comparing “normalization,” and dosage of medication and parent preference PAL Program Jensen et al, 2001
Stimulants 18 studies (15 RCTs). 429 kids, mostly elementary boys. ADHD and/or ODD/CD with aggressive behavior. Greatest ES in ADHD + aggression, 0.9. Lowest in MR, 0.3. Average was 0.78. At least 3 small studies (N=99) reduced aggression in ODD,CD without ADHD Good first choice for impulsive, reactive aggression. Quick trial, relatively benign. PAL Program Pappadopulos et al, 2006
Alpha 2 Agonists • Clonidine. 7 studies (4 RCTS). 114 kids. ADHD, CD, PTSD, Tourettes, Autism. • RCTs showed efficacy DBDs>Tourettes. • Watch for sedation, dizziness, hypotension • Guanfacine. 4 studies, 1 controlled. 72 kids. ADHD +/- tics • Mixed results. Better tolerated than clonidine. • ADHD kids who don’t tolerate stimulants, or kids with hyperarousal PAL Program Pappadopulos et al 2006
Anti-depressants • Seretonin and aggression in rats • SSRIs treat “impulsive aggression” in adults, primates • 30-40% of depressed adults are aggressive • Bupropion 3 RCTs, 2 open. 117 kids. CD and ADHD. “solid support.” • SSRIs mixed results, but still consideration for anxious/depressed. • Trazodone in DBD, effective for aggression. Small open trial (22) PAL Program Pappadopulos et al 2006
Antipsychotics • Since 2000, 9 studies in CD/ODD, ADHD, DBD, MR, Autism. 875 kids • Risperidone, low doses, short trials • ES ranging from 0.7-1.96. • Aripiprazole, 1 RCT, 218 children, efficacy and SE’s increased with dose. • Movement and metabolic disorders • Large/broad effect, short term management PAL Program Pappadopulos et al 2006
Mood Stabilizers • Lithium. 5 RCTs. Mostly inpatient CD. Mixed. More effective in “affective, explosive.” • Valproic Acid. 2 studies (1 RCT). 30 kids. Superior to placebo in aggression in CD. • Carbamazepine. 1 RCT showed no benefit • Oxcarbazepine. No data PAL Program
Mood Stabilizer, cont • Lithium monitoring. Baseline Cr and Ur specific gravity, TSH, ?EKG. Lithium level 1 week after dose change. Monitor level, kidney, TSH every 2-3 months. Weight. • VPA monitoring. CBC+LFTs prior. Repeat, with VPA level every few weeks in first couple months, then 1-2 times/year. Weight • Carbamazepine. CBC, LFTs, Renal, TSH prior. Repeat q2wks for 2m, then every 3-6m. PAL Program
Beta Blocker • Propranolol (others have intolerance) • Some evidence in adults with “impulsive, explosive” rage, aggression in MR, DD dementia. • 5 studies (1 RCT). 101 kids. Various dx (ADHD, DD, PTSD, “organic”). Largely positive • 1 RCT. 32 kids. CD. Pindolol not superior to MPH, with significant SE’s PAL Program
Thank you for coming! Please feel free to email me with any questions Michael.kisicki@seattlechildrens.org For specific clinical questions, contact PAL at 1-866-501-72575 PAL Program
Acknowledgement Dr. Terry Lee Dr. Robert Hilt Dr. William French PAL Program