The few genetically informative studies to examine post-traumatic stress  disorder (PTSD) and alcohol dependence (AD), all of which are based on a male  veteran sample, suggest that the co-morbidity between PTSD and AD may be  attributable in part to overlapping genetic influences, but this issue has yet  to be addressed in females. 
Data were derived from an all-female  twin sample (n=3768) ranging in age from 18 to 29 years. A trivariate  genetic model that included trauma exposure as a separate phenotype was fitted  to estimate genetic and environmental contributions to PTSD and the degree to  which they overlap with those that contribute to AD, after accounting for  potential confounding effects of heritable influences on trauma exposure. 
Additive genetic influences (A)  accounted for 72% of the variance in PTSD; individual-specific environmental (E)  factors accounted for the remainder. An AE model also provided the best fit for  AD, for which heritability was estimated to be 71%. The genetic correlation  between PTSD and AD was 0.54.
The heritability estimate for PTSD  in our sample is higher than estimates reported in earlier studies based almost  exclusively on an all-male sample in which combat exposure was the precipitating  traumatic event.
 However, our findings are consistent with the absence of  evidence for shared environmental influences on PTSD and, most importantly, the  substantial overlap in genetic influences on PTSD and AD reported in these  investigations.
 Additional research addressing potential distinctions by gender  in the relative contributions of genetic and environmental influences on PTSD is  merited.
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