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by utensil4778
747 days ago
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Partly, but the main effect is simply the different neurology. Neurotypical people actually get a kind of high from amphetamines, whereas ADHD people just get balanced. The drug just has a fundamentally different effect on people with ADHD. |
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People with ADHD are treated on a very low dose, and slowly titrated up which makes you much less likely to feel high. People without ADHD that are illegally using stimulants aren't getting treated by a doctor, and aren't going to slowly titrate up the dose, or take it consistently in low doses over a long period of time. People with ADHD sometimes do feel a small high or euphoria for a short time when they first start a new medication.
People without ADHD but using adderall illegally, e.g. as a "study drug" are not getting a high or euphoria if they consistently use a low dose like an ADHD person.
I have clinically diagnosed ADHD, but even the lowest possible dose of adderall makes me extremely high in an uncomfortable way and unable to sleep for days. Most likely, I also have a liver enzyme mutation that causes me to not metabolize amphetamines properly. Ritalin I metabolize quickly, and don't feel a high at all.
You can't diagnose ADHD by giving a medication and seeing how people respond. Even people with ADHD respond very differently to the same medications.
There is also the fact that medication with ADHD can give people executive control over hyperactive physical movement, so they may seem to be "slowing down," which kind-of looks like the opposite of a stimulant effect, especially to adults watching hyperactive kids calm down. But that is basically the opposite of what is actually happening- the increased stimulation allows the brain to regain executive control of behavior.
Here is a journal article reviewing the evidence and debunking this idea: https://www.nature.com/articles/1301164