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Anti-social behavior 'inherited' - study

UNTANGLING the mystery of inherited versus acquired traits may be a step closer, following a study of children conceived by in-vitro fertilization.

Arguments have been long and contentious over how much people inherit and how much they are influenced by their environments.

Researchers led by Frances Rice and Anita Thapar of Britain's Cardiff University focused on reports that smoking by mothers during pregnancy increased the chance of low birth weights and anti-social behavior.

The researchers studied 533 children who were genetically related to the mother that carried them and 195 who resulted from egg donations and thus not genetically related. The children were conceived at clinics in the United Kingdom and United States.

"What we have been able to confirm is that cigarette smoke in pregnancy does lower birth weight regardless of whether the mother and child are genetically related or not," Thapar said.

However, that was not the case with anti-social behavior in children, such as temper tantrums, fighting, bullying and disobedience.

Children of mothers who smoked during pregnancy had more anti-social problems than those from non-smoking moms in cases where the mother and child were related. But when mother and baby were not genetically related, smoking during pregnancy made no difference in later anti-social behavior of the child.

"It is now clear that offspring anti-social behavior is more dependent on inherited factors passed from mother to child, as our group of children with mothers who smoked during pregnancy with no direct genetic link showed no increased signs of anti-social behavior," Thapar said. "This suggests that other influencing factors such as the mother's personality traits and other inherited characteristics are at play during the development of a baby."

Such findings can help guide efforts to improve children's health, she said. For example, having the mother quit smoking is clearly important in improving a child's birth weight.

"But," she added, "it may be better to spend money on parenting skills after birth than on arguing that quitting smoking could improve children's behavior.





 

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