The Predictive Value of Early-Life Trauma, Psychopathy, and the Testosterone-Cortisol Ratio for Impulsive Aggression Problems in Veterans

Publication date

2020-05-23

Authors

Korpel, Pauline O J
Varkevisser, Tim
Hoppenbrouwers, Sylco S
Van Honk, Jack
Geuze, ElbertORCID 0000-0003-3479-2379ISNI 0000000388968907

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Background: In this study, we examined whether early-life trauma, psychopathy, and the testosterone/cortisol ratio predicted impulsive aggression problems in veterans. Method: A sample of 49 male veterans with impulsive aggression problems and 51 nonaggressive veterans were included in the study. Logistic regression analysis was performed with early-life trauma, primary and secondary psychopathy, and testosterone/cortisol ratio as continuous predictor variables; impulsive aggression status was entered as a binary outcome measure. Correlation analyses were conducted to examine pairwise relations among the predictors. Results: Results indicated that early-life trauma and secondary psychopathy, but not the testosterone/cortisol ratio or primary psychopathy, were significant predictors of impulsive aggression status. Conclusions: The current results indicate that early-life trauma and secondary psychopathy are risk factors for impulsive aggression problems among veterans. Future studies are needed to determine the exact causal relations among the variables examined here.

Keywords

cortisol, early-life trauma, impulsive aggression, psychopathy, testosterone, veterans, Journal Article

Citation

Korpel, P O J, Varkevisser, T, Hoppenbrouwers, S S, Van Honk, J & Geuze, E 2020, 'The Predictive Value of Early-Life Trauma, Psychopathy, and the Testosterone-Cortisol Ratio for Impulsive Aggression Problems in Veterans', Chronic stress (Thousand Oaks, Calif.), vol. 3, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1177/2470547019871901