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Heritability Of Depression More
Likely In Women
New York -
Genes apparently have a larger role in women than in men in the
risk of developing major depression, based on the results of a new
twin study appearing in the current issue of the American Journal of
Psychiatry.
"Previous studies gave us hints of
two different kinds of genetic differences between men and women:
quantitative -- whether the overall role of genes and environment
differs -- and qualitative -- whether the actual liability genes are
the same across the sexes," Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler, of Virginia
Commonwealth University's School of Medicine, told Reuters Health.
In an attempt to replicate their
earlier findings in a larger study, Kendler and his colleagues
assessed data on lifetime major depression in 42,161 twins, including
15,493 complete pairs, from the national Swedish Twin Registry.
The investigators found that "the
heritability of liability to major depression was significantly higher
in women (42 percent) than in men (29 percent)," and that the genes
that impact depression are correlated, but not identical, between the
sexes.
"On average, the effect of genes
appears to be substantially more important in women than in men,"
Kendler said.
He and his colleagues suggest that
there might be genes that alter the risk of depression in women in
response to their variable hormonal environment.
"We have pretty good evidence that
there is a set of women that are prone to depression, particularly in
the postpartum period and during the premenstrual phase of the
menstrual cycle," Kendler pointed out. This type of depression runs in
families, he said, but men don't seem to be affected, probably because
they don't have the hormonal fluctuations that women have.
Kendler
expects the new results to have an impact on research looking for
genetic vulnerability to depression. "It should emphasize the
necessity of studying things separately in men and women."-- Reuters
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