Authors
Jonna Kuntsi, Frühling Rijsdijk, Angelica Ronald, Philip Asherson, Robert Plomin
Publication date
2005/3/15
Journal
Biological Psychiatry
Volume
57
Issue
6
Pages
647-654
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
BACKGROUND
The high heritability of the core symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been repeatedly demonstrated, but few studies to date have investigated the extent to which the same genetic influences operate across development or new genes emerge at different developmental periods.
METHODS
We report data from a large, population-based study of approximately 4,000 twin pairs, who have been followed up from early to middle childhood.
RESULTS
Parents’ ratings of ADHD symptoms showed moderate stability across the ages, which was mainly due to shared genetic influences. There was also evidence of additional genetic influences, which were not shared with those acting earlier on, emerging at later age periods. The contribution of environmental influences to the stability of the ADHD symptoms over time was small. Parents’ ratings on the Conners’ DSM-IV ADHD …
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