Knopik Valerie S, Sparrow Elizabeth P, Madden Pamela A F, Bucholz Kathleen K, Hudziak James J, Reich Wendy, Slutske Wendy S, Grant Julia D, McLaughlin Tara L, Todorov Alexandre, Todd Richard D, Heath Andrew C
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Department of Community Health, Brown University Medical School, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Psychol Med. 2005 May;35(5):625-35. doi: 10.1017/s0033291704004155.
Genetic influences have been shown to play a major role in determining the risk of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). In addition, prenatal exposure to nicotine and/or alcohol has also been suggested to increase risk of the disorder. Little attention, however, has been directed to investigating the roles of genetic transmission and prenatal exposure simultaneously.
Diagnostic telephone interview data from parents of Missouri adolescent female twin pairs born during 1975-1985 were analyzed. Logistic regression models were fitted to interview data from a total of 1936 twin pairs (1091 MZ and 845 DZ pairs) to determine the relative contributions of parental smoking and drinking behavior (both during and outside of pregnancy) as risk factors for DSM-IV ADHD. Structural equation models were fitted to determine the extent of residual genetic and environmental influences on ADHD risk while controlling for effects of prenatal and parental predictors on risk.
ADHD was more likely to be diagnosed in girls whose mothers or fathers were alcohol dependent, whose mothers reported heavy alcohol use during pregnancy, and in those with low birth weight. Controlling for other risk factors, risk was not significantly increased in those whose mothers smoked during pregnancy. After allowing for effects of prenatal and childhood predictors, 86% of the residual variance in ADHD risk was attributable to genetic effects and 14% to non-shared environmental influences.
Prenatal and parental risk factors may not be important mediators of influences on risk with much of the association between these variables and ADHD appearing to be indirect.
研究表明,基因影响在注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)风险的决定中起主要作用。此外,也有研究表明,产前接触尼古丁和/或酒精会增加患该疾病的风险。然而,很少有人关注同时研究基因传递和产前接触的作用。
分析了1975 - 1985年出生的密苏里州青春期女性双胞胎对父母的诊断性电话访谈数据。对总共1936对双胞胎(1091对同卵双胞胎和845对异卵双胞胎)的访谈数据进行逻辑回归模型拟合,以确定父母吸烟和饮酒行为(孕期和非孕期)作为《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM - IV)中ADHD风险因素的相对贡献。构建结构方程模型以确定在控制产前和父母预测因素对风险的影响时,基因和环境对ADHD风险的残余影响程度。
母亲或父亲有酒精依赖、母亲报告孕期大量饮酒以及出生体重低的女孩更有可能被诊断为ADHD。在控制其他风险因素后,母亲孕期吸烟的女孩患ADHD的风险没有显著增加。在考虑了产前和儿童期预测因素的影响后,ADHD风险的残余变异中86%归因于基因效应,14%归因于非共享环境影响。
产前和父母风险因素可能不是影响ADHD风险的重要中介因素,这些变量与ADHD之间的许多关联似乎是间接的。