Tell your doc. Sounds like it's too much.
The exact scenario as you. My daughter is 7 and 48lbs. Her doctor just increased her dose to 36mg of Concerta a few days ago. I have seen an increase in sadness and uncontrollable emotional outbursts ( to the point of being right down mean).
my daughter is 7 year old and she weights 48.5 she was on 27 mg of conerta and now the doctor had put her on 36 mg i was wondering if you any parent had this happen to your child and how they have react
My child is 54 lbs and is taking 36mg. The only problem I have had with her is in the evening the "come down" is horrible. She is very irritable. She has improved in school tremendously but I'm still concerned about the let down.
My son is also 8 and he is on 54 mg. He weighs a little less than your son. I always push food into him. We did the clonodine for a while but it made his heart race at night when he took it. It scared me. He has a hard time falling asleep. Basically, I wouldn't be concerned with 36 mg.
TALK TO YOUR DOCTOR ABOUT ADDING CLONADINE AT BED TIME. WE HAD TO DO IT FOR MY 7 YEAR OLD DAUGHTER BECAUSE SHE WAS ACTING LIKE HER MEDS WEREN'T WORKING ANYMORE, AND IT HELPED ALL THE WAY AROUND. IT HELPS MAKE THE CONCERTA WORK LIKE IT SHOULD, IT HELPS THEM SLEEP INSTEAD OF THE CONCERTA WEARING OFF THEN THEM NOT BEING ABLE TO FALL ASLEEP UNTIL LATE AT NIGHT, AND IT IS SUPPOSED TO HELP WITH THEIR APPETITE. THAT SEEMS TO BE PRETTY NORMAL TOO. GIVE IT A SHOT. IT WAS MY OTHER OPTION BECAUSE THE DOC THOUGHT HER BODY HAD GROWN IMMUNE TO THE MEDS, AND i AM NOT ABOUT TO UP HER DOSE SINCE SHE ONLY WEIGHS ABOUT 50 POUNDS.
yes as the child grows and yes in weight particularly they dosage has to be increased or it will not work how it should and has in the past i know with the concerta they roughly work it out 1mg for each kilogram,so my child is on 36mg but weighs 40kg we went just under as apposed to giving to higher dose. hope that helps
In general, no - the dosage is not based on weight. However, perhaps your son's doctor is concerned about increasing the dosage because of the appetite-suppressing side effect, and if your son is too thin for his size, he may be concerned about that.
Having said that, if the medication is not helping him, then something needs to be done. Continuing to give him medication that is not working is not a good idea.
You should take this back to your son's doctor and get specifics about why his weight and an increased dosage don't mix. If the dr responds that its because of the recommended dosage because of his weight-- then get another dr, cause that is just not the right answer.If the dr thinks that a switch to a different medication may be more beneficial, then ask why, and if the answer makes sense, you can take that approach. But continuing to give him a dosage of medication that does not work -- well, that does not make sense in any case, I don't think.