How to prevent relapse of mood symptoms in ADHD patients?
Preventing relapse of mood symptoms in adults with ADHD begins with understanding how stress, routine changes and treatment gaps can affect emotional wellbeing. According to the NICE ADHD guideline (NG87), mood symptoms such as anxiety or low mood often return when ADHD symptoms intensify or when regular reviews are missed. NHS services, including the CNWL Adult ADHD Service, note that disrupted routines, irregular medication use and increased pressure can contribute to relapse.
Understanding why relapse happens
Relapse is often linked to emotional dysregulation and difficulties with planning, organisation and stress-handling. A large review on PubMed (2023) explains that adults with ADHD may rely on coping strategies that are less effective during periods of stress, leading to returning anxiety or depressive symptoms. These shifts usually happen gradually, so noticing early emotional or behavioural changes is helpful.
Maintain consistent medication and review
Medication can support mood stability when taken consistently and reviewed by an ADHD specialist. The NICE ADHD recommendations highlight the importance of regular follow-up to monitor effectiveness and mood changes. A recent UK shared care guideline also shows higher relapse risk when treatment reviews are delayed or doses are missed (Adult ADHD Shared Care Guideline).
Use psychological therapies such as CBT
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy can reduce relapse by improving emotional regulation and addressing negative thought patterns. Evidence from PubMed shows CBT helps adults with ADHD strengthen coping skills and manage triggers that lead to returning symptoms. Many NHS services offer psychological support alongside medication.
Strengthen daily routines and lifestyle patterns
Consistent routines, good sleep, physical activity and mindfulness support emotional stability. Using planners or digital reminders can ease executive functioning strain and protect against relapse, especially during periods of stress or disruption.
Integrating support from different services
Some adults benefit from additional behavioural or coaching programmes. Services such as Theara Change provide structured tools that complement clinical care and help maintain long-term progress.
Key takeaway
Preventing relapse in ADHD involves consistent medication, access to therapies like CBT, steady routines and regular specialist reviews. Early attention to mood changes and supportive structure offer the strongest protection against symptoms returning.

