Author:
TRELOAR S. A.,MARTIN N. G.,BUCHOLZ K. K.,MADDEN P. A. F.,HEATH A. C.
Abstract
Background. Conflicting evidence exists on causes of vulnerability to post-natal depression. We
investigated genetic and environmental influences on variation in post-natal depressive symptoms
(PNDS) following first live birth, and sources of covariation with the personality trait Neuroticism
and lifetime major depression occurring post-natally (DEP-PN) and at other times (DEP-XPN) to
test for shared genetic influences.Method. Retrospective interview and questionnaire data from 838 parous female twin pairs (539
monozygotic, 299 dizygotic) from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council
volunteer adult twin register were used for multivariate genetic model-fitting. Data on PNDS were
evaluated for consistency with diagnostic interview assessment.Results. Genetic factors explained 38% of variance in PNDS (95% confidence interval 26–49%)
and 25% of the variance in interview-assessed DEP-PN. The genetic correlation between PNDS
and lifetime major depression (DEP-PN and DEP-XPN) was low (rg = 0·17, 95% confidence
interval = 0·09–0·28), suggesting that the questionnaire was measuring a construct other than post-natally occurring major depression, possibly post-natal dysphoria. Associations between PNDS and
obstetric factors were very modest.Conclusions. Findings suggest modest genetic influences on major depression occurring post-natally. Independent and stronger genetic influences identified for post-natal symptomatology or
dysphoria (PNDS) justify further investigation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
81 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献