Kendler K S, Walters E E, Truett K R, Heath A C, Neale M C, Martin N G, Eaves L J
Department of Psychiatry, Medical College of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond 23298, USA.
Behav Genet. 1995 Nov;25(6):499-515. doi: 10.1007/BF02327574.
Self-report symptoms of anxiety are widely used in mental health and social science research as an index of current psychiatric state. Previous twin studies have suggested that genetic factors account for a significant proportion of the variance in these symptoms. To replicate and extend these findings, we examined self-report symptoms of panic-phobia and somatization in the "Virginia 30,000" twin-family sample. Model fitting applied to 80 unique relationships in the twin-family pedigree produced the following major results: (i) genetic effects were significant for both symptom factors, accounting for between 25 and 49% of the total variance, with the exception of symptoms of panic-phobia in females, where they accounted for 15-16% of the variance; (ii) familial environmental effects were absent for symptoms of somatization, while for symptoms of panic-phobia they accounted for a very small proportion of variance in males (< or = 1.2%) and a modest proportion in females (6-17%); (iii) spousal correlations were present for both factors, ranging from +0.05 to +0.20; (iv) genetic factors which influenced symptoms were generally the same in males and females, although their effect was greater in males; (v) heritability estimates were lower in the population-based than in the volunteer sample; and (vi) when test-retest reliability was included in the model, results suggest that genetic factors account for at least half of the stable variance for all symptom factors, except panic-phobia in females. Our results support the validity of previous twin studies of self-report symptoms of anxiety and suggest that genetic factors significantly influence these symptoms but familial-environmental factors play little or no etiologic role.
焦虑的自我报告症状在心理健康和社会科学研究中被广泛用作当前精神状态的指标。先前的双胞胎研究表明,遗传因素在这些症状的差异中占很大比例。为了重复和扩展这些发现,我们在“弗吉尼亚30000”双胞胎家庭样本中研究了惊恐-恐惧症和躯体化的自我报告症状。对双胞胎家庭谱系中的80种独特关系进行模型拟合产生了以下主要结果:(i)两种症状因素的遗传效应均显著,占总方差的25%至49%,女性惊恐-恐惧症症状除外,其遗传效应占方差的15%-16%;(ii)躯体化症状不存在家庭环境效应,而惊恐-恐惧症症状在男性中占方差的比例非常小(≤1.2%),在女性中占适度比例(6%-17%);(iii)两种因素均存在配偶相关性,范围从+0.05至+0.20;(iv)影响症状的遗传因素在男性和女性中通常相同,尽管其在男性中的作用更大;(v)基于人群的遗传率估计低于志愿者样本;(vi)当模型中纳入重测信度时,结果表明,除女性惊恐-恐惧症外,所有症状因素的稳定方差中遗传因素至少占一半。我们的结果支持先前关于焦虑自我报告症状的双胞胎研究的有效性,并表明遗传因素显著影响这些症状,但家庭环境因素几乎没有或没有病因学作用。