Release Date: Dec. 23, 2004
CONDUCT DISORDER,
ALCOHOLISM MAY HAVE DIFFERENT ORIGINS IN TEENS
By Ann Quigley, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
While teenagers who drink also tend to have behavior problems, there is more
of a genetic basis to their conduct than there is to the lure of alcohol, a
new study on 14-year-old Finnish twins reports.
The alcohol abuse appears to stem from environmental causes, the researchers
say.
Many studies have noted a link between bad conduct and alcohol problems, but
exactly how they are related is not fully understood. In the past, bad parenting
got the brunt of the blame for conduct disorder but it is now recognized that
the disorder - like alcoholism in adults - probably also has a genetic cause.
"The severity of problems that adolescents with conduct disorder experience
in school adjustment and home functioning underscores the need to understand
better its causes and its relationship with alcohol abuse," says study
author Richard J. Rose, Ph.D., of the Department of Psychology at Indiana University
in Bloomington and the Department of Public Health at the University of Helsinki
in Finland.
Young people with conduct disorder engage in behaviors like bullying, stealing,
running away from home, fire-setting, destroying property and engaging in cruelty
to animals or people.
Rose and colleagues conducted face-to-face interviews with nearly 2,000 twins
at age 14. By comparing fraternal twins with the more genetically similar identical
twins, Rose and colleagues hoped to discover the relative environmental and
genetic underpinnings of conduct disorder and alcoholism.
They also administered a questionnaire to the twins' parents to determine
the existence of any familial alcohol problems and contacted schools to get
teacher and peer ratings on the twins.
Symptoms of conduct disorder were common, reported by nearly half of the study
participants, and 12 percent of the twins were diagnosed with full-blown conduct
disorder. Genes played a significant role in these symptoms, especially among
girls, Rose and colleagues found.
Rose says that although the occurrence of conduct disorder symptoms seems
high, it is not far off-base given the prevalence of misconduct by young people.
"I think the prevalence of conduct disorder symptoms is higher in this
sample than would be expected in a random one," Rose says. "But a
single symptom of [conduct disorder] is not uncommon, even in a random sample
of young adolescents."
Alcohol abuse problems were comparatively rare among the study participants.
Also, the researchers found no genetic underpinning for alcohol abuse; that
is, identical and fraternal twins exhibited similar behavior patterns. They
did find conduct disorder to be significantly linked with alcohol abuse - that
is, twins with conduct disorder symptoms were more likely to have alcohol abuse
problems, and vice versa - but this link was due to the environment the twins
lived in, not due to genes.
The study results appear in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental
Research.
If the study participants had been
older, a genetic influence on alcoholism would have been noted, according
to the study. "That we found no genetic
effects on symptoms of alcoholism must be understood in the context of the
youthful age of our interviewed twin sample," Rose says. "Significant
genetic effects on patterns of use and abuse of alcohol among Finnish twins
are detectable in middle to late adolescence."
The researchers speculate that conduct
disorder may be an earlier manifestation of genetic dispositions that later
contribute to alcoholism. "Early identification
of adolescents at risk for development of alcoholism might focus on symptoms
of conduct disorder to offer opportunities for targeted intervention," Rose
says.
This research was supported by National
Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, the Academy of Finland, and the
Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation.
FOR
MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829
or www.hbns.org.
Center for
the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
|