People with intermittent explosive disorder at five
times greater risk for substance abuse than those who don’t display frequent
aggressive behavior
Newswise, May 2, 2017 — People with
intermittent explosive disorder (IED)—a condition marked by frequent physical
or verbal outbursts—are at five times greater risk for abusing substances such
as alcohol, tobacco and marijuana than those who don’t display frequent
aggressive behavior, according to a new study by researchers from the
University of Chicago.\
In the study, published Feb. 28,
2017 in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, Emil Coccaro, MD, and colleagues
analyzed data from more than 9,200 subjects in the National Comorbidity Survey,
a national survey of mental health in the United States.
They found that as the severity of
aggressive behavior increased, so did levels of daily and weekly substance use.
The findings suggest that a history of frequent, aggressive behavior is a risk
factor for later substance abuse, and effective treatment of aggression could
delay or even prevent substance abuse in young people.
IED affects as many as 16 million
Americans, more than bipolar disorder and schizophrenia combined. It is often
first diagnosed in adolescents, some of whom are as young as 11, years before
substance abuse problems usually develop.
IED runs in families and is thought to have a
significant genetic component, although Coccaro said people tend to treat it as
a social-behavioral issue instead of as a true neurobiological disorder.
“People don’t see this as a medical
problem. They think of it as simply bad behavior they have developed over the
course of their lives, but it isn’t. It has significant biology and
neuroscience behind it,” said Coccaro, who is the Ellen C. Manning Professor of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience at UChicago.
Previous research has implied that
aggressive behavior in IED is due to the presence of other psychiatric
disorders, such as anxiety or depression. But the new UChicago study found no
such relationship.
While substance abuse, like
excessive drinking, can clearly make aggressive behavior worse, the onset of
IED almost always precedes the development of chronic substance abuse. Coccaro
and his team found that IED preceded substance abuse in 92.5 percent of the
cases where subjects developed both disorders.
Coccaro emphasized that early
psychological intervention, medication and cognitive therapy are the most
effective treatments to prevent, or at least delay, substance abuse problems in
adolescents diagnosed with IED.
“What you’re really treating is the
emotional dysregulation that leads to aggression,” Coccaro said. “The earlier
you treat this dysregulation, the more likely you are to offset other disorders
that come later down the road.”
The study, “Intermittent Explosive
Disorder and Substance Use Disorder: Analysis of the National Comorbidity
Survey Replication Sample,” was supported by the National Institute of Mental
Health. Additional authors include Jennifer Fanning, PhD, and Royce Lee, MD,
both from the University of Chicago.
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