Researchers from University of Cambridge and University of Southampton in the UK used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods to look at the brain structure of male adolescents and young adults who had been diagnosed with conduct disorder.
This included persistent behavioural problems including aggressive and destructive behaviour, lying and stealing, and for older children, weapon use or staying out all night.
Regions that develop at similar rates would be expected to
show similar patterns of cortical thickness, for example.
"There is evidence already of differences in the brains of individuals with serious behavioural problems, but this is often simplistic and only focused on regions such as the amygdala, which we know is important for emotional behaviour," said Luca Passamonti from University of Cambridge.
"But conduct disorder is a complex behavioural disorder, so likewise we would expect the changes to be more complex in nature and to potentially involve other brain regions," said Passamonti.
They divided the individuals with conduct disorder according to whether they displayed childhood-onset conduct disorder or adolescent-onset conduct disorder.
Researchers found that youths with childhood-onset conduct disorder (sometimes termed 'early-starters') showed a strikingly higher number of significant correlations in thickness between regions relative to the controls.
They believe this may reflect disruptions in the normal pattern of brain development in childhood or adolescence.
Youths with adolescent-onset conduct disorder ('late starters') displayed fewer such correlations than the healthy individuals.
"The differences that we see between healthy teenagers and those with both forms of conduct disorders show that most of the brain is involved, but particularly the frontal and temporal regions of the brain," said Graeme Fairchild from University of Southampton.
"This provides extremely compelling evidence that conduct disorder is a real psychiatric disorder and not, as some experts maintain, just an exaggerated form of teenage rebellion," said Fairchild.
The findings were published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
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