Literature DB >> 15123494

Conduct problems in children and adolescents: a twin study.

Jane Scourfield1, Marianne Van den Bree, Neilson Martin, Peter McGuffin.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Evidence supports a genetic influence on conduct problems as a continuous measure of behavior and as a diagnostic category. However, there is a lack of studies using a genetically informative design combined with several different informants and different settings.
OBJECTIVES: To examine genetic and environmental influences on conduct problems rated by parent and teacher reports and self-reports and to determine whether their ratings reflect a common underlying phenotype.
DESIGN: A twin study design was used to examine conduct problem scores from ratings by teachers, parents, and twins themselves.
SETTING: General community. PARTICIPANTS: Twins aged 5 to 17 years participating in the Cardiff Study of All Wales and North England Twins (CaStANET) project. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Conduct problem scale from the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire.
RESULTS: Conduct problem scores were significantly heritable based on parent and teacher reports and self-reports. Combining data from all 3 informants showed that they are rating a common underlying phenotype of pervasive conduct problems that is entirely genetic, while teacher ratings show separate genetic influences that are not shared with other raters.
CONCLUSIONS: Conduct problems are significantly heritable based on parent and teacher reports and self-reports, and are also influenced by environmental effects that impinge uniquely on children from the same family. There is a cross-situational conduct problems' phenotype, underlying the behavior measured by all informants, that is wholly genetic in origin. No significant influence of shared environmental effects was found.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15123494     DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.61.5.489

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry        ISSN: 0003-990X


  18 in total

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6.  Gene-environment interplay in the association between pubertal timing and delinquency in adolescent girls.

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7.  The association between conduct problems and the initiation and progression of marijuana use during adolescence: a genetic analysis across time.

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8.  Marital conflict and conduct problems in Children of Twins.

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9.  Prenatal alcohol exposure is associated with conduct disorder in adolescence: findings from a birth cohort.

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10.  Externalizing disorders in the offspring from the San Diego prospective study of alcoholism.

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