Meyers Jacquelyn L, Shmulewitz Dvora, Elliott Jennifer C, Thompson Ronald G, Aharonovich Efrat, Spivak Baruch, Weizman Abraham, Frisch Amos, Grant Bridget F, Hasin Deborah S
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2014 Sep;75(5):859-69. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2014.75.859.
The association between alcoholism in parents and related disorders in their offspring is well established in cultures with intermediate/high alcohol consumption, but not in those with low consumption, such as Israel. This study investigated differences in parental transmission of alcohol problems and related psychopathology between immigrants from the former Soviet Union (FSU) to Israel and other Israelis-two Israeli subgroups with differing alcohol consumption behaviors and social norms.
A total of 1,347 adults from a household sample were interviewed. Regression analyses were used to examine associations between parental alcohol problems and participant disorders: alcohol, nicotine, and cannabis use disorders (AUD, NUD, CUD); antisocial personality disorder (ASPD); major depressive disorder (MDD); and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). We also examined the associations of parental alcohol problems with participant disorders characterized with two latent factors: externalizing (EXT: AUD, NUD, CUD, ASPD) and internalizing (INT: MDD, PTSD). Differential parental transmission of alcohol problems in FSU (n = 315) and non-FSU (n = 1,032) Israelis was examined with statistical interaction.
Among emigrants from the FSU, parental alcohol problems predicted AUD, NUD, CUD, ASPD, PTSD, EXT, and INT (mean ratios = 1.38-4.83). In non-FSU Israelis, parental alcohol problems predicted only ASPD and PTSD (mean ratios = 1.08-4.09). Significant interactions were observed for AUD, CUD, PTSD, and EXT; each relationship was stronger in FSU Israelis and null (AUD, CUD, EXT) or less robust (PTSD) in other Israelis.
Parental alcohol problems were related to substance use and psychiatric disorders differently in FSU and other Israelis, two groups with different alcohol consumption levels and drinking norms. We propose that, in social contexts that vary in the degree to which they constrain alcohol behavior, underlying genetic predispositions may manifest as different disorders.
在酒精消费处于中等/高水平的文化中,父母酗酒与其子女的相关疾病之间的关联已得到充分证实,但在酒精消费低的文化中,如以色列,情况并非如此。本研究调查了前苏联(FSU)移民到以色列的人群与其他以色列人(两个具有不同酒精消费行为和社会规范的以色列亚组)在父母酒精问题及相关精神病理学遗传方面的差异。
对来自家庭样本的1347名成年人进行了访谈。采用回归分析来检验父母酒精问题与参与者疾病之间的关联:酒精、尼古丁和大麻使用障碍(AUD、NUD、CUD);反社会人格障碍(ASPD);重度抑郁症(MDD);以及创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。我们还通过两个潜在因素研究了父母酒精问题与参与者疾病的关联:外化(EXT:AUD、NUD、CUD、ASPD)和内化(INT:MDD、PTSD)。通过统计交互作用研究了FSU(n = 315)和非FSU(n = 1032)以色列人在父母酒精问题遗传方面的差异。
在来自FSU的移民中,父母酒精问题可预测AUD、NUD、CUD、ASPD、PTSD、EXT和INT(平均比率 = 1.38 - 4.83)。在非FSU以色列人中,父母酒精问题仅可预测ASPD和PTSD(平均比率 = 1.08 - 4.09)。在AUD、CUD、PTSD和EXT方面观察到显著的交互作用;每种关系在FSU以色列人中更强,而在其他以色列人中则为零(AUD、CUD、EXT)或较弱(PTSD)。
在FSU以色列人和其他以色列人这两个酒精消费水平和饮酒规范不同的群体中,父母酒精问题与物质使用和精神疾病的关联有所不同。我们认为,在对酒精行为约束程度不同的社会环境中,潜在的遗传易感性可能表现为不同的疾病。