Genetic Epidemiology of Alcohol-Induced Blackouts


Autoria(s): Nelson, Elliot C.; Heath, Andrew C.; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Madden, Pamela A. F.; Fu, Qiang; Knopik, Valerie; Lynskey, Michael T.; Whitfield, John B.; Statham, Dixie J.; Martin, Nicholas G.
Contribuinte(s)

J. D. Barchas

J. T. Coyle

Data(s)

01/03/2004

Resumo

Background: Alcohol-induced blackouts (ie, periods of anterograde amnesia) have received limited recent research attention. Objective: To examine the genetic epidemiology of lifetime blackouts and having had 3 or more blackouts in a year, including analyses controlling for the frequency of intoxication. Design, Setting, and Participants: Members of the young adult Australian Twin Register, a volunteer twin panel born between January 1, 1964, and December 3 1, 1971, were initially registered with the panel as children by their parents between 1980 and 1982. They underwent structured psychiatric telephone inter-views from February 1996 through September 2000. The current sample contains 2324 monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs (mean [SDI age 29.9 [2.5] years) for whom both twins' responses were coded for blackout questions and for frequency of intoxication. Main Outcome Measure: Data on lifetime blackouts and having had 3 or more blackouts in a year were collected within an examination of the genetic epidemiology of alcoholism. Results: A lifetime history of blackouts was reported by 39.3% of women and 52.4% of men; 11.4% of women and 20.9% of men reported having had 3 or more blackouts in a year. The heritability of lifetime blackouts was 52.5% and that of having had 3 or more blackouts in a year was 57.8%. Models that controlled for frequency of intoxication found evidence of substantial genetic contribution unique to risk for the blackouts and a significant component of genetic risk shared with frequency of intoxication. Conclusions: The finding of a substantial genetic contribution to liability for alcohol-induced blackouts including a component of genetic loading shared with frequency of intoxication may offer important additional avenues to investigate susceptibility to alcohol-related problems.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:68467/UQ68467_fulltext.pdf

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:68467

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Medical Association

Palavras-Chave #Psychiatry #Specifying Sedative/hypnotic Sensitivity #Different Anterograde Amnesias #Methyl-d-aspartate #Ethanol Sensitivity #Ventral Hippocampus #Pyramidal Neurons #Receptor Subtypes #Memory #Mice #Risk
Tipo

Journal Article