The Heritability of Bipolar Affective Disorder and the Genetic Relationship to Unipolar Depression
King's College London · University of Wales
Abstract
Twin studies of bipolar affective disorder (BPD) have either been small or have not used explicit diagnostic criteria. There has been little use of genetic model fitting and no analyses to explore the etiological overlap with unipolar depression (UPD).
Sixty-seven twin pairs, 30 monozygotic and 37 dizygotic, in which the proband had BPD were ascertained, and lifetime diagnoses were made using DSM-IV criteria. Univariate models were applied to estimate the contribution of additive genetic and environmental effects. Bipolar data were then combined with those from 68 monozygotic and 109 dizygotic pairs in which the proband had UPD. Two models were explored: a classic 2-threshold approach, in which BPD and UPD occupy the same continuum of liability but differ in severity, and a correlated liability model of mania and depression.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Mania
- Bipolar disorder
- Concordance
- Proband
- Heritability
- Twin study
- Genetic correlation
- Psychology