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Effects of MAOA-Genotype, Alcohol Consumption, and Aging on Violent Behavior
Authors:Roope Tikkanen,Rickard L. Sjö  berg,Francesca Ducci,David Goldman,Matti Holi,Jari Tiihonen, Matti Virkkunen
Affiliation:From the Institute of Clinical Medicine, Department of Psychiatry (RT, MH, MV), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;NIH/NIAAA, Laboratory of Neurogenetics (RLS, DG), Rockville, Maryland;Center for Clinical Research, Uppsala University (RLS), Västerås, Sweden;Department of Neurosurgery (RLS), University Hospital, Umeå, Sweden;King's College (FD), London, UK;and Department of Forensic Psychiatry and Clinical Physiology (JT), University of Kuopio, Niuvanniemi Hospital, Kuopio, Finland.
Abstract:Background:  Environmental factors appear to interact with a functional polymorphism ( MAOA-LPR ) in the promoter region of the monoamine oxidase A gene ( MAOA ) in determining some forms of antisocial behavior. However, how MAOA - LPR modulates the effects of other factors such as alcohol consumption related to antisocial behavior is not completely understood.
Methods:  This study examines the conjunct effect of MAOA-LPR , alcohol consumption, and aging on the risk for violent behavior. Recidivism in severe impulsive violent behavior was assessed after 7 to 15 years in a sample of 174 Finnish alcoholic offenders, the majority of whom exhibited antisocial or borderline personality disorder or both, and featured impulsive temperament traits.
Results:  The risk for committing new acts of violence increased by 2.3% for each kilogram of increase in yearly mean alcohol consumption ( p =  0.004) and decreased by 7.3% for every year among offenders carrying the high activity MAOA genotype. In contrast, alcohol consumption and aging failed to affect violent behavior in the low activity MAOA genotyped offenders. MAOA-LPR showed no main effect on the risk for recidivistic violence.
Conclusions:  Violent offenders carrying the high activity MAOA genotype differ in several ways from carriers with the low activity MAOA risk allele previously associated with antisocial behavior. Finnish high activity MAOA genotyped risk alcoholics exhibiting antisocial behavior, high alcohol consumption, and abnormal alcohol-related impulsive and uncontrolled violence might represent an etiologically distinct alcohol dependence subtype.
Keywords:Psychiatric Genetics    Alcoholism    Antisocial Personality Disorder    Borderline Personality Disorder    Violent Behavior
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