Your Child with ADHD and Height & Weight:
What’s Really Going On
Why growth in ADHD is never just one thing — and what you can do about it right now
One child with ADHD seems to live on air and two fish fingers. Another forgets lunch, then eats the entire kitchen at five in the afternoon. Another is gaining weight even before medication starts. I see versions of all three every week in clinic.
Growth in ADHD is never just one thing. Height and weight are affected by several overlapping systems — appetite regulation, sleep, emotional stress, sensory sensitivities, medication effects, and co-existing conditions. The right question is never simply “is it the medicine?” The better question is: which parts of this child’s regulation system are affecting growth right now?
What the Research Tells Us
The research actually points in two directions at the same time, which is why growth in ADHD can feel so confusing.
First, untreated ADHD is linked with a higher risk of overweight and obesity in many children and teenagers. A meta-analysis of 16 studies involving nearly 15,000 young people with ADHD and over 128,000 comparison children found significantly higher odds of overweight or obesity — a pooled odds ratio of 1.56. ADHD itself can push some children towards unhealthy weight gain, entirely independent of any medication.
Second, long-term stimulant treatment can reduce weight gain and, in some children, modestly affect height over time. A 2025 meta-analysis of 18 studies concluded that long-term medication treatment was associated with reduced growth in measured weight and height.
Both can be true at the same time. Untreated ADHD may move some children towards excess weight, while treatment may move some children towards poor appetite and slower weight gain. That is not a contradiction — it is a signal that we need to look at the whole child, not just the prescription.
The Main Pathways That Affect Growth in ADHD
ADHD
1When ADHD Itself Leads to Weight Gain
ADHD is not only an attention condition. It is a self-regulation condition. The same brain systems that help a child stop, plan, wait, and notice internal signals also help with healthy eating. When those systems are running differently, meals and food routines become unpredictable.
A child with ADHD may forget meals, snack impulsively, eat very quickly without noticing fullness, seek highly rewarding foods, or eat emotionally when bored or overwhelmed. After school — when structure disappears and the medicine is wearing off — the kitchen often gets hit hard.
A 2025 study found that children with ADHD and overweight had significantly more eating and sleep problems than children with ADHD at a healthy weight. Lower satiety response and faster eating rate were key risk factors. In those with overweight, shorter sleep duration was also linked to higher BMI.
So the weight gain isn’t simply about “bad eating.” It is about a regulation system that makes every aspect of healthy eating — routine, slowness, noticing fullness, resisting temptation — genuinely harder.
2When ADHD Leads to Low Weight or Poor Growth
Not every child with ADHD overeats. Some are underweight or grow slowly even before medication starts. This is especially common when ADHD overlaps with autism, sensory processing differences, oral-motor difficulties, or anxiety-related avoidant eating.
These children may have a very narrow range of accepted foods, avoid textures or mixed dishes, tire at mealtimes, feel anxious about eating at school, or simply have a patchy, low-calorie intake that doesn’t show up as dramatically “small” but adds up to nutritional vulnerability over time.
The problem is often not excess intake but inconsistent intake and poor variety. A child can be slim and still poorly nourished. The scale doesn’t tell the whole story.
Factors That Can Push Weight Up or Down
⬆ Pushes Weight Up
⬇ Pushes Weight Down
3What Stimulant Medication Actually Does to Appetite
Stimulant medicines — methylphenidate and amphetamine preparations — increase dopamine and noradrenaline signalling in the brain. That improves attention, impulse control, and task persistence. But while the medicine is active, it can also suppress appetite.
In practice, this often looks like: minimal interest in breakfast before the first dose, almost nothing eaten at school lunch, a reasonable appetite returning late afternoon as the medicine wears off, and then significant hunger in the evening. The total calorie intake across the day can drop considerably.
Weight is usually the first warning sign. A steady drop across weight centiles is the signal to act. Height tends to drift later if reduced intake continues over many months or years. Long-term studies suggest the average height effect is usually modest, but some children are more sensitive — which is exactly why monitoring matters.
Data from the MTA study suggested consistent long-term stimulant exposure was associated with a somewhat lower adult height in some children. Other reviews found smaller or more transient effects. The practical conclusion is not alarm — it is consistent monitoring.
4Non-Stimulant Medications: A Gentler Appetite Profile
Not every child needs a stimulant, and not every stimulant-related growth concern means stopping medication. Non-stimulants often have a gentler appetite profile.
Atomoxetine
Long-term data suggest little or no major long-term effect on growth for most children, although some studies show small reductions in expected height or weight in certain subgroups.
Guanfacine
A large longitudinal database study found that guanfacine on its own was not associated with clinically meaningful changes in weight or height trajectories. When growth decline was seen, it was mainly in children also receiving stimulants.
If a child is doing well behaviourally and academically but growth is slipping too much, there are options: adjusting dose timing, changing formulation, reducing dose, or considering a non-stimulant pathway. This is a conversation worth having with your prescriber — there is usually more flexibility in the plan than parents realise. Note for South African families: guanfacine is not currently available locally, but atomoxetine is.
5Sleep: The Hidden Player Nobody Talks About Enough
Children with ADHD commonly struggle with falling asleep, bedtime resistance, restless nights, shorter sleep duration, and irregular routines. Sleep is not a bonus — it is a biological necessity that affects nearly every system in the body, including appetite and growth.
Poor sleep worsens emotional regulation, increases impulsive eating, makes children crave easy high-reward foods, reduces energy for organised activity, and weakens the brain’s ability to notice hunger and fullness signals properly. Across paediatric research, shorter sleep duration is clearly associated with higher odds of overweight and obesity.
6Anxiety: The Troublemaker That Goes Both Ways
Anxiety travels with ADHD in a large number of children, and it pushes weight in both directions depending on the child.
Some anxious children lose appetite, feel nauseated before school, avoid eating in front of others, eat very slowly, or become rigid about foods. Others comfort-eat, graze constantly, crave sugar or carbohydrates, and use food as a way to calm themselves when overwhelmed.
A child may appear to be “off food because of the stimulant,” when in fact the medicine, morning anxiety, poor sleep, and sensory discomfort are all sharing the blame. Treating the anxiety often unlocks the appetite problem as much as adjusting the medication dose.
Research in adolescents shows a prospective, bidirectional relationship between anxiety symptoms and eating problems. Anxiety does not simply sit quietly in the background — it actively disturbs eating patterns.
7Nutrition Quality and the Supplement Question
Children with ADHD are often more vulnerable to poor dietary variety and some micronutrient insufficiencies — particularly when they are selective eaters or chronically under-eating. Research suggests lower ferritin, lower vitamin D, and lower zinc levels are more common in ADHD groups than in controls.
That said, this does not mean every child with ADHD needs a cupboard full of supplements. The evidence for blanket supplementation is mixed. NICE specifically advises against offering fatty acid supplementation as a treatment for ADHD itself.
The goal is smarter, not more expensive. Protect total calorie intake first. Prioritise protein, iron-rich foods, and variety where possible. Investigate deficiencies when history or growth suggests risk. Tailor advice for selective eating or restricted diets. And avoid expensive “brain booster” promises unless there is a clear clinical reason and genuine evidence.
A child can be overweight and still poorly nourished. A child can be thin and have reasonably good micronutrient intake. The scale does not tell the whole story.
When Conditions Overlap: Why One Child Gains and Another Loses
ADHD rarely travels alone. Co-existing conditions often explain why growth patterns look so different between children with the same diagnosis.
- Autism and sensory differences — Rigid food preferences, avoidance of textures, poor dietary variety, and chronic low protein intake
- Learning difficulties and school stress — Reduced confidence, increased distress, chaotic or avoided mealtimes at school
- Oppositionality and emotional dysregulation — Mealtimes become battlefields; poor, rushed, or control-driven eating follows
- Low mood — Reduces appetite and activity in some children, but increases comfort eating in others
- Anxiety — The most common co-traveller; can push growth in either direction
When growth drifts, it is usually a systems problem — not a single diagnosis problem.
A Practical Monitoring Checklist for Home & Clinic
- Baseline height & weight before starting medication
- Height every 6 months (children & teens)
- Weight every 3 months (under 10 years)
- Weight at 3 & 6 months after starting, then 6-monthly (older children)
- Pulse and blood pressure at each review
- Is breakfast happening before medication kicks in?
- Is lunch actually being eaten at school?
- Is there reliable food after school when appetite returns?
- Is total daily calorie intake adequate?
- Any obvious sensory food avoidance patterns?
- Is your child falling asleep within 30–45 minutes of bedtime?
- Are they waking frequently or restless?
- Is sleep duration adequate for their age?
- Are routines consistent even on weekends?
- Has poor sleep been discussed with your prescriber?
What Actually Helps
When appetite or growth becomes a concern, the answer is almost never to stop treatment. Often the better answer is to adjust the whole plan. Here are the strategies I reach for most often in clinic:
- Give medication with or after food rather than on an empty stomach
- Build a high-protein breakfast before the medicine fully kicks in
- Use reliable after-school and bedtime snacks when appetite naturally returns
- Choose calorie-dense nutritious foods if total intake is low
- Address constipation, reflux, nausea, or sensory barriers at mealtimes
- Improve sleep timing and sleep quality — this changes everything
- Treat co-existing anxiety; it often unlocks the eating problem
- Review dose, formulation, and timing with your prescriber
- Consider non-stimulant options when clinically appropriate
- Use planned treatment breaks in selected cases if growth is significantly affected
The goal is not simply symptom control. The goal is symptom control with healthy growth, healthy sleep, and a child who still looks like themselves. Those two things should always be held in the same hand.
The Takeaway
Growth in ADHD depends on regulation. When attention, appetite, sleep, mood, and routine are all wobbling, the scale and growth chart often wobble too. That is not a failure of parenting or a reason to abandon treatment — it is a signal that we need to look at the whole child, not just one piece of the puzzle.
Untreated ADHD increases the risk of overweight and obesity in many children. Stimulant medication may suppress appetite and slow weight gain, and in some children modestly influence height over time. Anxiety, poor sleep, autism-related feeding difficulties, and selective eating can push the picture in either direction.
Your child’s brain isn’t broken — it is wired differently, and that wiring affects every regulation system including how they eat, sleep, and grow. Good ADHD care must look beyond the prescription pad. It must look at the whole child.
If your child is on stimulant medication, try offering a high-protein meal or snack — eggs, cheese, peanut butter, chicken — before the morning dose kicks in (ideally within 20–30 minutes of waking). Many families are surprised by how much more their child eats at that window. Keep a simple note of weight every 3–4 weeks so you have a real trajectory, not just a feeling.
Selected References
- Zhang Y, et al. Effects of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder on growth in children and adolescents: a systematic review and meta-analysis. World Journal of Psychiatry. 2025. PubMed: 41112607.
- NICE Guideline NG87. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: diagnosis and management. Last reviewed 7 May 2025. nice.org.uk/guidance/ng87
- Wang X, et al. Eating behaviour and sleep habit problems and their correlation with symptom severity in children with ADHD. Appetite. 2025. PubMed: 40887629.
- Wojnowski NM, et al. Effect of stimulants on final adult height. 2022. PubMed: 36193720.
- Schneider G, et al. Weight and height in children with ADHD: a longitudinal database study assessing guanfacine, stimulants and no pharmacotherapy. J Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol. 2019. PubMed: 30942617.
- Spencer TJ, et al. Effects of atomoxetine on growth following up to five years of treatment. JAACAP. 2007. PubMed: 17979588.
- Sluggett L, Wagner SL, Harris RL. Sleep duration and obesity in children and adolescents. Curr Obes Rep. 2019. PubMed: 30266216.
- Trompeter N, et al. The prospective relationship between anxiety symptoms and eating disorder symptoms in adolescence. 2024. PMC: PMC12198302.
- Belsham B, et al. The SASOP/PsychMg child and adolescent ADHD practice guideline. South African Journal of Psychiatry. 2025.