基因和环境对行为去抑制的影响。

American Journal of Medical Genetics Pub Date : 2000-10-09
S E Young, M C Stallings, R P Corley, K S Krauter, J K Hewitt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童破坏性行为障碍的合并症在流行病学和临床研究中都有报道。这些问题也与早期药物使用和其他行为去抑制的标志有关。先前的双胞胎研究表明,反社会行为和酒精依赖之间的大部分共变是由于共同的遗传影响。类似的结果也被报道用于行为问题和多动症。在本研究中,通过科罗拉多双胞胎登记处和科罗拉多纵向双胞胎研究招募了172对MZ和162对DZ双胞胎的青少年样本,使用标准化的精神病学访谈和人格评估进行评估。行为障碍和注意缺陷多动障碍的DSM-IV症状计数,以及物质实验和寻求新奇的测量,被用作潜在行为去抑制特征的指标。验证性因素模型适合于个人水平的数据显示,在每个测量中,一个强大的共同因素占观察方差的16-42%。一个评估潜在表型遗传和环境结构的共同通路模型表明,行为去抑制具有高度遗传性(A(2) = 0.84),并且不受共同环境因素的显著影响。行为障碍与物质实验之间的残留相关性可以用共同的环境效应来解释,注意缺陷多动障碍与新奇寻求之间的残留相关性可以用遗传显性来解释。这些结果表明,各种青少年问题行为可能具有共同的潜在遗传风险。
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Genetic and environmental influences on behavioral disinhibition.

Comorbidity among childhood disruptive behavioral disorders is commonly reported in both epidemiologic and clinical studies. These problems are also associated with early substance use and other markers of behavioral disinhibition. Previous twin research has suggested that much of the covariation between antisocial behavior and alcohol dependence is due to common genetic influences. Similar results have been reported for conduct problems and hyperactivity. For the present study, an adolescent sample consisting of 172 MZ and 162 DZ twin pairs, recruited through the Colorado Twin Registry and the Colorado Longitudinal Twin Study were assessed using standardized psychiatric interviews and personality assessments. DSM-IV symptom counts for conduct disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, along with a measure of substance experimentation and novelty seeking, were used as indices of a latent behavioral disinhibition trait. A confirmatory factor model fit to individual-level data showed a strong common factor accounting for 16-42% of the observed variance in each measure. A common pathway model evaluating the genetic and environmental architecture of the latent phenotype suggested that behavioral disinhibition is highly heritable (a(2) = 0.84), and is not influenced significantly by shared environmental factors. A residual correlation between conduct disorder and substance experimentation was explained by shared environmental effects, and a residual correlation between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and novelty seeking was accounted for by genetic dominance. These results suggest that a variety of adolescent problem behaviors may share a common underlying genetic risk.

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