Age of Alcoholism Onset
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of General Psychiatry
- Vol. 46 (3) , 231-236
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1989.01810030037005
Abstract
• Alcoholics who start abusing alcohol early in life have been found to exhibit problems with mood and aggression control more frequently than patients with a later onset of alcoholism. Because alcohol preference and consumption, as well as mood and aggression regulation, are believed to be influenced by serotonin, relationships between tryptophan availability and mood and aggression regulation were explored in alcoholics. When studied in the entire population, the ratio of tryptophan over other amino acids competing for brain entry (which influences brain serotonin) was found to be lowest one day after cessation of drinking and to increase progressively over the following two to three weeks. When the population was divided into two groups of patients according to whether subjects started abusing alcohol before or after 20 years of age, associations between a low tryptophan ratio and depressive and aggressive tendencies were significant only in the subgroup of patients with an early onset of alcoholism. They were not significant in the rest of the population. Our data are compatible with the interpretation that patients with an early onset of alcoholism have a preexisting serotonin deficit that could manifest itself by an increased alcohol intake early in life and by an increased vulnerability to fluctuations in precursor availability.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationship between changes in plasma amino acids and depression in alcoholic patientsAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1984
- Depression, suicide, and aggression in alcoholics and their relationship to plasma amino acidsPsychiatry Research, 1984
- Plasma -tryptophan/neutral amino acid ratio and dexamethasone suppression in depressionPsychiatry Research, 1984
- Indolic Substances in Plasma, Cerebrospinal Fluid, and Frontal Cortex of Human Subjects Infused with Saline or TryptophanJournal of Neurochemistry, 1981
- Plasma Tryptophan and Five Other Amino Acids in Depressed and Normal SubjectsArchives of General Psychiatry, 1981
- Central monoamine metabolism in depressions. I. Serotonin and related compoundsComprehensive Psychiatry, 1980
- Tryptophan transport through the blood-brain barrier: In vivo measurement of free and albumin-bound amino acidLife Sciences, 1979
- Use of the Research Diagnostic Criteria and the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia to study affective disordersAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1979
- The Role of Blood-Brain Barrier Transport of Tryptophan and Other Neutral Amino Acids in the Regulation of Substrate-Limited Pathways of Brain Amino Acid MetabolismPublished by Springer Nature ,1979
- TRANSPORT OF METABOLIC SUBSTRATES THROUGH THE BLOOD‐BRAIN BARRIER1Journal of Neurochemistry, 1977