Author:
FARMER A.,SCOURFIELD J.,MARTIN N.,CARDNO A.,McGUFFIN P.
Abstract
Background. Medically unexplained chronic fatigue in childhood
may cause considerable disability
and (by definition) its cause remains unclear. A study of fatigue in healthy
twins has been
undertaken to examine whether or not genetic factors play a part.Method. A questionnaire survey of the main carers of an epidemiological
population-based sample
of 670 twin pairs who were asked about periods of unexplained and disabling
fatigue in their twins.
Out of 1340 individuals a period of disabling fatigue was reported for
92 (6·9%). Thirty-three
(2·5%) reported disabling fatigue for more than 1 month. Zygosity
could be confidently assigned
in 98% of the sample providing 278 monozygotic (MZ) and 378 dizygotic (DZ)
pairs. These data
were analysed using a structural equation modelling approach.Results. The results showed that disabling fatigue in childhood
is highly familial with an MZ
tetrachoric correlation (rMZ) of 0·81 and a DZ tetrachoric correlation
(rDZ) of 0·59, for fatigue
lasting at least a week. The most acceptable model using Akaike's
information criteria, was one
containing additive genetic effects (A) and shared environment (C) plus
residual (or non-shared)
environment (E). For fatigue lasting at least a month rMZ was 0·75
and rDZ 0·47. The most
acceptable model included just A and E. However, the role of shared environment
could not be
conclusively rejected.Conclusions. Unexplained disabling fatigue in childhood is
substantially familial. Both genetic and
shared environmental factors are worth further exploration in a search
for the causes.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
52 articles.
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