Abstract
AbstractPatients with misophonia experience strong negative emotional responses to human-produced sounds at a level disrupting normal social interaction. The exact nature of the disorder remains a matter of debate. Here, we investigated the genetic aetiology of misophonia in order to understand contributing factors and shed light on the nosology of the disorder. For misophonia, we used an unpublished genome-wide association study (GWAS) from 23andMe on a self-report item probing a common misophonic symptom: the occurrence of rage when others produce eating sounds.. We used gene-based and to functional annotation analyses to establish its neurobiological determinants. Next, we calculated genetic correlations (rG) of this misophonia GWAS with a wide range of traits and disorders from audiology (tinnitus, hearing performance and hearing trauma), psychiatry, neurology, and personality traits. Misophonia was significantly correlated with tinnitus, major depression disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder (0.12 < rG < 0.22). Stronger genetic correlations (0.21 < rG < 0.42) were observed for two clusters of personality traits: a neuroticism/guilt and an irritability/sensitivity cluster. Our results showed no genetic correlation with ADHD, OCD, and psychotic disorders. A negative correlation with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) was found, which may be surprising given the previously reported comorbidities and the sensory sensitivity reported in ASD. Clustering algorithms showed that misophonia consistently clustered with MDD, generalized anxiety, PTSD and related personality traits. We conclude that — based on genetics — misophonia most strongly clusters with psychiatric disorders and specific personality profile that matches those for anxiety and PTSD.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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