Smederevac Snežana, Mitrović Dušanka, Mihić Ljiljana, Sadiković Selka, Dinić Bojana M, Milutinović Aleksandra, Belopavlović Radomir, Corr Philip J
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad, Serbia.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Novi Sad, Serbia.
J Affect Disord. 2025 Mar 15;373:208-218. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.12.101. Epub 2024 Dec 31.
Anxiety and fear are emotions often intertwined in response to aversive stimuli, complicating efforts to differentiate them and understand their distinct consequences. This study explores the common genetic and environmental factors contributing to the co-occurrence of anxiety disorders and dimensions of the revised Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory (rRST). A sample of 356 monozygotic (22.5 % males; M = 25.73, SD = 8.3) and 386 dizygotic (33.9 % males; M = 24.21, SD = 8.33) twins from the Serbian Twin Advanced Registry was analyzed. The Psychiatric Diagnostic Screening Questionnaire (PDSQ) provided scales for panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia, and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), while the Reinforcement Sensitivity Questionnaire (RSQ) measured the Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS), Behavioral Activation System (BAS), and Fight/Flight/Freeze System (FFFS). Common additive genetic effects accounted for most of the variance in BIS, Fight, and panic, agoraphobia, and social phobia, while specific additive genetic effects were highest for Flight. Shared environmental effects were most pronounced for Fight across all models, with additional shared influences on BAS and BIS for panic, and BAS and Freeze for agoraphobia and social phobia. Nonshared environmental effects were the highest specific contributors across variables. Genetic overlap between anxiety disorders and rRST dimensions suggests pleiotropy, with unique environmental factors playing an important role in disorder development. While anxiety and fear may stem from distinct etiologies, their shared symptomatology complicates differentiation, highlighting the importance of considering both genetic and environmental influences in anxiety disorders.
焦虑和恐惧是对厌恶刺激做出反应时常常相互交织的情绪,这使得区分它们并理解其不同后果的努力变得复杂。本研究探讨了导致焦虑症共现的常见遗传和环境因素,以及修订后的强化敏感性理论(rRST)的维度。对来自塞尔维亚双胞胎高级登记处的356对同卵双胞胎(22.5%为男性;M = 25.73,SD = 8.3)和386对异卵双胞胎(33.9%为男性;M = 24.21,SD = 8.33)进行了分析。精神科诊断筛查问卷(PDSQ)提供了惊恐障碍、广场恐惧症、社交恐惧症和广泛性焦虑症(GAD)的量表,而强化敏感性问卷(RSQ)测量了行为抑制系统(BIS)、行为激活系统(BAS)和战斗/逃跑/僵住系统(FFFS)。共同的加性遗传效应占BIS、战斗以及惊恐、广场恐惧症和社交恐惧症变异的大部分,而特定的加性遗传效应在逃跑方面最高。在所有模型中,共享环境效应在战斗方面最为显著,对惊恐的BAS和BIS、广场恐惧症和社交恐惧症的BAS和僵住还有额外的共享影响。非共享环境效应是所有变量中最高的特定贡献因素。焦虑症和rRST维度之间的遗传重叠表明存在基因多效性,独特的环境因素在疾病发展中起重要作用。虽然焦虑和恐惧可能源于不同的病因,但它们共同的症状表现使区分变得复杂,突出了在焦虑症中考虑遗传和环境影响的重要性。