Author:
Khan Amir A.,Jacobson Kristen C.,Gardner Charles O.,Prescott Carol A.,Kendler Kenneth S.
Abstract
BackgroundWe know little about the degree to which comorbidity, so commonly seen among psychiatric disorders, arises from variation in normal personality.AimsTo study the degree to which variation in normal personality accounts for the comorbidity of eight common psychiatric and substance use disorders.MethodInternalising disorders (major depression, generalised anxiety and panic disorders, phobias), externalising disorders (alcohol and drug dependence, anti-social personality and conduct disorders) and personality dimensions of neuroticism, extraversion and novelty seeking were assessed in 7588 participants from a population-based twin registry. The proportion of comorbidity explained by each personality dimension was calculated using structural equation modelling.ResultsNeuroticism accounted for the highest proportion of comorbidity within internalising disorders (20–45%) and between internalising and externalising disorders (19–88%). Variation in neuroticism and novelty seeking each accounted for a modest proportion (10–12% and 7–14%, respectively) of the comorbidity within externalising disorders. Extraversion contributed negligiblyConclusionsHigh neuroticism appears to be a broad vulnerability factor for comorbid psychiatric disorders. Novelty seeking is modestly important for comorbid externalising disorders.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
326 articles.
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