Breslau Joshua, Borges Guilherme, Saito Naomi, Tancredi Daniel J, Benjet Corina, Hinton Ladson, Kendler Kenneth S, Kravitz Richard, Vega William, Aguilar-Gaxiola Sergio, Medina-Mora Maria Elena
Health Division, RAND Corporation, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-2665, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2011 Dec;68(12):1284-93. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.140.
Twin studies suggest that conduct disorder (CD) is under substantial genetic influence, which is stronger for aggressive than for nonaggressive symptoms. Studies of migrating populations offer an alternative strategy for separating environmental and genetic influences on psychiatric disorders.
To examine variation in the prevalence of CD associated with migration from Mexico to the United States and to determine whether this variation is similar for aggressive and nonaggressive CD symptoms and symptom profiles.
The prevalences of CD, different types of CD symptoms, and CD symptom profiles were compared across 3 generations of people of Mexican origin with increasing levels of exposure to American culture: families of origin of migrants (residing in Mexico), children of Mexican migrants raised in the United States, and Mexican-American children of US-born parents.
General population surveys conducted in Mexico and the United States using the same diagnostic interview.
Adults aged 18 to 44 years in the household population of Mexico and the household population of people of Mexican descent in the United States.
Conduct disorder criteria, assessed using the World Mental Health version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview.
Compared with the risk in families of origin of migrants, risk of CD was lower in the general population of Mexico (odds ratio [OR], 0.54; 95% CI, 0.19-1.51), higher in children of Mexican-born immigrants who were raised in the United States (OR, 4.12; 95% CI, 1.47-11.52), and higher still in Mexican-American children of US-born parents (OR, 7.64; 95% CI, 3.20-18.27). The association with migration was markedly weaker for aggressive than for nonaggressive symptoms.
The prevalence of CD increases dramatically across generations of the Mexican-origin population after migration to the United States. This increase is of larger magnitude for nonaggressive than for aggressive symptoms, consistent with the suggestion that nonaggressive symptoms are more strongly influenced by environmental factors than are aggressive symptoms.
双胞胎研究表明,品行障碍(CD)受遗传因素的影响很大,其中攻击性行为症状比非攻击性行为症状受遗传影响更强。对移民群体的研究为区分环境因素和遗传因素对精神疾病的影响提供了另一种策略。
研究从墨西哥移民到美国后品行障碍患病率的变化,并确定这种变化在攻击性行为和非攻击性行为的品行障碍症状及症状谱中是否相似。
比较了三代具有不同程度美国文化接触经历的墨西哥裔人群中品行障碍、不同类型品行障碍症状以及品行障碍症状谱的患病率,这三代人群分别为:移民的原籍家庭(居住在墨西哥)、在美国长大的墨西哥移民子女以及父母为美国出生的墨西哥裔美国儿童。
在墨西哥和美国使用相同的诊断访谈进行的一般人群调查。
墨西哥家庭人口中18至44岁的成年人以及美国墨西哥裔家庭人口中18至44岁的成年人。
使用世界心理健康综合国际诊断访谈版本评估品行障碍标准。
与移民原籍家庭相比,墨西哥普通人群中品行障碍的风险较低(优势比[OR],0.54;95%置信区间,0.19 - 1.51),在美国长大的墨西哥出生移民子女中品行障碍风险较高(OR,4.12;95%置信区间,1.47 - 11.52),父母为美国出生的墨西哥裔美国儿童中品行障碍风险更高(OR,7.64;95%置信区间,3.20 - 18.27)。与移民的关联在攻击性行为症状方面明显弱于非攻击性行为症状。
移民到美国后,墨西哥裔人群中品行障碍的患病率在几代人之间急剧上升。这种上升在非攻击性行为症状方面比攻击性行为症状更大,这与非攻击性行为症状比攻击性行为症状受环境因素影响更强的观点一致。