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Overt Behavior Problems and Serotonergic Function in Middle Childhood Among Male and Female Offspring of Alcoholic Fathers
Author(s) -
Twitchell Geoffrey R.,
Hanna Gregory L.,
Cook Edwin H.,
Fitzgerald Hiram E.,
Little Karley Y.,
Zucker Robert A.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
alcoholism: clinical and experimental research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.267
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1530-0277
pISSN - 0145-6008
DOI - 10.1111/j.1530-0277.1998.tb03917.x
Subject(s) - serotonergic , offspring , psychology , child behavior checklist , cbcl , aggression , poison control , risk factor , clinical psychology , developmental psychology , serotonin , medicine , pregnancy , biology , receptor , environmental health , genetics
A large body of literature indicates that the serotonergic system is involved in behavioral regulation, as evidenced by the inverse relationship between impulsive aggression and serotonergic function found in adult alcoholics and nonalcoholics. However, studies of this relationship among child and adolescent offspring of alcoholics (COAs) have not previously been done. This study examines the potentially parallel relationship between behavioral dysregulation and low serotonergic function in young COAs. The relationship is of potential interest as a phenotypic marker of biological vulnerability to aggressiveness, which itself has been hypothesized to be a risk factor for later antisocial alcoholism. The present work is part of an ongoing prospective study of the development of risk for alcohol abuse/dependence and other problematic outcomes in a sample of families subtyped by the fathers' alcoholism classification. We examined the relationship between overt behavior problems in middle childhood (mean age = 10.5 ± 1.7 years) and whole blood serotonin (5‐HT) in a subsample of the offspring ( N = 32 boys and 12 girls). Using a Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) index of behavioral under‐control, we obtained results indicating that high total behavior problem (TBP) children had lower levels of whole blood 5‐HT than did low‐TBP children ( p < 0.01). These results support the hypothesis that there is an inverse relationship between whole blood serotonin levels and behavior problems in young male and female COAs. A father's alcoholism status was not significantly related to his child's 5‐HT level, i.e., the child's phenotypic expression of behavioral dysregulation was more reliably connected to serotonergic function than was paternal alcoholism.

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