Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression in Young Adults: Genetic and Environmental Influences on Stability and Change

Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression in Young Adults: Genetic and Environmental Influences on... AbstractEtiological factors for stability and change in symptoms of anxiety and depression, including sex differences, are largely unexplored in young adults. Using biometric modeling and two-wave longitudinal data from 4393 Norwegian twins aged 18 to 31 we explored (i) heritabilities of symptoms of anxiety and depression, (ii) effects of genetic and environmental factors on the stability and change of such symptoms, and (iii) sex-specific effects. The phenotypic cross-time correlations for symptoms of anxiety and depression were estimated to .54 and .49 for males and females, respectively. The best fitting longitudinal model specified additive genetic and individual environmental influences and emerging effects from the shared environment for females only. For both males and females, long-term stability was mainly attributable to stable additive genetic factors, whereas change was essentially related to environmental influences. Minor time-specific genetic effects were indicated, and some stable variance was due to the individual environment. Additive genetic risk factors explained 87% and 68% of the phenotypic cross-time correlation for males and females, with the unique environment accounting for the remaining covariance. The results provide strong evidence for the temporal stability of genetic risk factors for symptoms of anxiety and depression in young adults, and substantial sex-specific influences on heritability, stability and change. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Twin Research and Human Genetics Cambridge University Press

Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression in Young Adults: Genetic and Environmental Influences on Stability and Change

Twin Research and Human Genetics , Volume 10 (3): 12 – Feb 21, 2012

Loading next page...
 
/lp/cambridge-university-press/symptoms-of-anxiety-and-depression-in-young-adults-genetic-and-h07Afc0YjQ

References (61)

Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007
ISSN
1839-2628
eISSN
1832-4274
DOI
10.1375/twin.10.3.450
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractEtiological factors for stability and change in symptoms of anxiety and depression, including sex differences, are largely unexplored in young adults. Using biometric modeling and two-wave longitudinal data from 4393 Norwegian twins aged 18 to 31 we explored (i) heritabilities of symptoms of anxiety and depression, (ii) effects of genetic and environmental factors on the stability and change of such symptoms, and (iii) sex-specific effects. The phenotypic cross-time correlations for symptoms of anxiety and depression were estimated to .54 and .49 for males and females, respectively. The best fitting longitudinal model specified additive genetic and individual environmental influences and emerging effects from the shared environment for females only. For both males and females, long-term stability was mainly attributable to stable additive genetic factors, whereas change was essentially related to environmental influences. Minor time-specific genetic effects were indicated, and some stable variance was due to the individual environment. Additive genetic risk factors explained 87% and 68% of the phenotypic cross-time correlation for males and females, with the unique environment accounting for the remaining covariance. The results provide strong evidence for the temporal stability of genetic risk factors for symptoms of anxiety and depression in young adults, and substantial sex-specific influences on heritability, stability and change.

Journal

Twin Research and Human GeneticsCambridge University Press

Published: Feb 21, 2012

There are no references for this article.