AI Article Synopsis

  • - Caffeine, despite being widely used, is linked to symptoms of toxicity and dependence, but its connection to psychiatric and substance use disorders is not well understood, especially in community settings.
  • - A study involving over 3600 adult twins from the Virginia Twin Registry found that higher caffeine use and related issues were associated with various disorders like major depression and alcohol dependence, but these links were not significant among identical twins, suggesting that genetics and family environment play a crucial role.
  • - The findings indicate that while there is a moderate association between caffeine consumption and disorders, the positive correlations likely stem from shared familial factors rather than direct causation between caffeine use and the development of mental health issues.

Article Abstract

Background: Although caffeine is the most commonly used psychoactive substance and often produces symptoms of toxicity and dependence, little is known, especially in community samples, about the association between caffeine use, toxicity and dependence and risk for common psychiatric and substance use disorders.

Method: Assessments of lifetime maximal caffeine use and symptoms of caffeine toxicity and dependence were available on over 3600 adult twins ascertained from the population-based Virginia Twin Registry. Lifetime histories of major depression (MD), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and panic disorder, alcohol dependence, adult antisocial behavior and cannabis and cocaine abuse/dependence were obtained at personal interview. Logistic regression analyses in the entire sample and within monozygotic (MZ) twin pairs were conducted in SAS.

Results: In the entire sample, measures of maximal caffeine use, heavy caffeine use, and caffeine-related toxicity and dependence were significantly and positively associated with all seven psychiatric and substance use disorders. However, within MZ twin pairs, controlling for genetic and family environmental factors, these associations, while positive, were all non-significant. These results were similar when excluding twins who denied regular caffeine use.

Conclusions: Maximal lifetime caffeine intake and caffeine-associated toxicity and dependence are moderately associated with risk for a wide range of psychiatric and substance use disorders. Analyses of these relationships within MZ twin pairs suggest that most of the observed associations are not causal. Rather, familial factors, which are probably in part genetic, predispose to both caffeine intake, toxicity and dependence and the risk for a broad array of internalizing and externalizing disorders.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291706008622DOI Listing

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