Hey, your linked doctor also claims to have found some other interesting things. To wit:
Platelet serotonin-2A receptors: a potential biological marker for suicide behavior.
Peripheral adrenergic receptors in affective illness and schizophrenia
Platelet serotonin-2 receptor binding sites in depression and suicide
Platelet 5HT2 receptors in obsessive-compulsive disorders
Platelet 5HT2 receptors in schizophrenia: effects of illness and neuroleptic treatment.
Platelet serotonin-2A receptors: a potential biological marker for suicide behavior
Adrenergic receptor subtypes in stress-induced behavioral depression.
Potential role of the gene transcription factor cyclic AMP-responsive element binding protein in ethanol withdrawal-related anxiety. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 288:866-878.
Involvement of the cyclic AMP-responsive element binding protein gene transcription factor in genetic preference for alcohol drinking behavior
Apparently almost all abherrent behavior according to him is genetic.
Now, here is how it works. He does his research. He publishes his finding. It is peer reviewed. The experiments are repeated by other scientists. Then it becomes accepted science. until then, it is just clinical research. Inconclusive. This is from your own HERE IT IS! link....
"Findings published in the December 2004 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research indicate...
Get that term...it has meaning.. Clinical & experimental Research indicate?
Okay, lets go a step further...
For this study, participants comprised 38 students (20 male, 18 female) at the University of Colorado, 21 to 29 years of age, who indicated drinking patterns classified as moderate to heavy. Participants were either homozygous for the A allele (n=23) or heterozygous (n=15). Each received intravenous doses of alcohol that were designed to cause breath alcohol concentration (BAC) levels of .02, .04, and .06. Researchers measured subjective intoxication, stimulation, sedation, and mood states at baseline and at each of the three BAC levels.....Results indicate that individuals with the G allele had higher subjective feelings of intoxication, stimulation, sedation, and happiness across trials as compared to participants with the A allele.
Okay, now a study of 38 young adults who are given intoxicating levels of alcohol and then interviewed may be conclusive to you, and admittely magazine articles may publish it as fact ,but in science it is known as a clinical trial. It is not "proof".
I know that is a little beyond what your field of knowledge.. but nevertheless, that is the case. He has many hurdles yet to cross before these finding are accepted as medical and scientific reality.
When and if they are, I it will be interesting, and what it will conclude if true, is that certain people get drunk easier than others and therefore are more prone to alcoholism. It still won't Prove alcoholism is a disease.
Get it?
Probably not.