Conduct Disorder

Repetitive and persistent pattern of behaviour in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate norms or rules are violated; to a lesser degree, it is called Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) in younger children

Aetiology

Bio-psycho-social influences

Genetic
  • Some evidence in twin studies
Brain injury
  • Intrauterine or post-natal CNS trauma
  • Antisocial behaviour in general is more common in children with neurological conditions
Environmental
  • Individual child problem - difficult temperament
  • Family circumstances
    • Families with parents with mental illness and intellectual difficulties
    • Drug and alcohol problems
    • Domestic violence
    • Single parent families
  • Parenting style
    • Lack of house rules - no set routine
    • Lack of clarity as to how children are to behave
    • Inconsistent responses to undersired behaviour with failure to follow through on consequences or with rewards
    • Lack of techniques to deal with crises or resolve conflict within the family
    • Lack of supervision

Pathophysiology

Types

  • Mild-moderate - restricted to family environment
  • Severe
    • Unsocialised - predominantly violent behaviour and more likely to be dealt within the criminal justice system
    • Socialised - more coverty antisocial acts or better ability to avoid getting involved with the criminal justice system

Co-morbitidies

ADHD
  • ADHD characterised by inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity
  • Frequently co-occurs with difficulty in self-regulation
  • Symptoms of ADHD are developmentally inappropriate, impair function, pervasive across settings, and longstanding from age 5
  • It is possible to misdiagnose ADHD in children with HD as they present similarly but also are highly co-morbid
  • However, ADHD (on its own) and ADHD with CD appear to be subtypes
  • While the short-term response to stimulant medication is the same in these two groups, children with ADHD and CD have higher rates of antisocial personality as adults
Others
  • RAD
  • Reading and other learning difficulties
  • Depression
  • Dubstance misuse
  • Deviant sexual behaviour

Clinical presentation

The presence of three or more of the following criteria in the past 12 months with at least one criterion present in the past 6 months:
  • Aggression to people or animals
  • Destruction of property
  • Decietfulness or theft
  • Serious violation of rules

Management

Children with no co-morbidities

  • Parent/foster training when child is under 11
  • Child-focused programmes where child is aged between 9 and 14
  • Multimodel interventions for young people aged between 11 and 17 years

Pharmacological management

  • Medication is not main line but in extreme cases can help with impulsivity and aggressive behaviour - in these cases risperidone (atypical antipsychotic) is the drug of choice
  • Stimulant medication for co-existing ADHD
  • SSRIs for co-existing depression