
@article{ref1,
title="Parental alcohol dependence and the transmission of adolescent behavioral disinhibition: a study of adoptive and non‐adoptive families",
journal="Addiction",
year="2009",
author="King, Serena M. and Keyes, Margaret and Malone, Stephen M. and Elkins, Irene and Legrand, Lisa N. and Iacono, William G. and McGue, Matthew K.",
volume="104",
number="4",
pages="578-586",
abstract="<p><b>Aim</b> To examine the genetic and environmental influences of parental alcoholism on offspring disinhibited behavior.</p> <p><b>Design</b> We compared the effect of parental alcoholism history on offspring in adoptive and non‐adoptive families. In families with a history of parental alcohol dependence, we examined the effect of exposure to parental alcoholism symptoms during the life‐time of the adolescent.</p> <p><b>Setting</b> Assessments occurred at the University of Minnesota from 1998 to 2004.</p> <p><b>Participants</b> Adolescents adopted in infancy were ascertained systematically from records of three private Minnesota adoption agencies; non‐adopted adolescents were ascertained from Minnesota birth records. Adolescents and their rearing parents participated in in‐person assessments.</p> <p><b>Measurements</b> For adolescents, measures included self‐ reports of delinquency, deviant peers, substance use, antisocial attitudes and personality. For parents, we conducted DSM‐IV clinical assessments of alcohol abuse and dependence.</p> <p><b>Findings</b> A history of parental alcohol dependence was associated with higher levels of disinhibition only when adolescents were related biologically to their rearing parents. Within families with a history of parental alcoholism, exposure to parental alcohol misuse during the life‐time of the adolescent was associated with increased odds of using alcohol in adopted adolescents only.</p> <p><b>Conclusions</b> These findings suggest that the association between a history of parental alcohol dependence and adolescent offspring behavioral disinhibition is attributable largely to genetic rather than environmental transmission. We also obtained some evidence for parental alcohol misuse as a shared environmental risk factor in adoptive families.</p><p />",
language="",
issn="0965-2140",
doi="10.1111/j.1360-0443.2008.02469.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2008.02469.x"
}