Literature DB >> 25901774

A genetically informed study of the longitudinal relation between irritability and anxious/depressed symptoms.

Jeanne Savage1, Brad Verhulst1, William Copeland2, Robert R Althoff3, Paul Lichtenstein4, Roxann Roberson-Nay5.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the longitudinal genetic and environmental association between juvenile irritability and symptoms of anxiety and depression. This study's goal was to assess the relationship between these constructs across a critical developmental period spanning childhood to young adulthood.
METHOD: Parents (n = 1,348 twin pairs) from the Swedish Twin Study of Child and Adolescent Development completed the Child/Adult Behavior Checklist (CBCL/ABCL) about their twin children. Data were collected during a prospective, 4-wave study starting in childhood (ages 8-9 years) and ending in young adulthood (ages 19-20 years). An irritability score and an anxious/depressed score were computed from CBCL/ABCL item endorsements. Genetically informative cross-lagged models were used to estimate the genetic and environmental relationship between these 2 constructs across time.
RESULTS: Our models suggested that irritability more strongly predicted anxious/depressed symptoms than vice versa, consistent with a causal role of irritability on anxiety/depression at older ages. This relationship was significant only in late childhood/early adolescence. Additive genetic and unique environmental factors were significant contributors to both irritability and anxious/depressed symptoms and were both specific to and shared between these 2 constructs. The same common environmental factors influenced both constructs, although these factors accounted for a smaller amount of variance than genetic or unique environmental factors.
CONCLUSION: This study adds to our understanding of the developmental relationship between irritability and anxious/depressed symptoms and the contribution of genes and environmental factors to their association across development. Findings suggest the need to monitor for emergence of internalizing symptoms in irritable children and their potential need for therapeutic intervention.
Copyright © 2015 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anxiety; depression; genetic; irritability; twins

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25901774      PMCID: PMC4407138          DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2015.02.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry        ISSN: 0890-8567            Impact factor:   8.829


  26 in total

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4.  Chronic versus episodic irritability in youth: a community-based, longitudinal study of clinical and diagnostic associations.

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7.  Preschool irritability: longitudinal associations with psychiatric disorders at age 6 and parental psychopathology.

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10.  A twin study of anxiety-related behaviours in pre-school children.

Authors:  Thalia C Eley; Derek Bolton; Thomas G O'Connor; Sean Perrin; Patrick Smith; Robert Plomin
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2.  Irritability in children: what we know and what we need to learn.

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5.  Test-retest reliability and validity of a frustration paradigm and irritability measures.

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6.  Multi-method assessment of irritability and differential linkages to neurophysiological indicators of attention allocation to emotional faces in young children.

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Review 7.  Exposure therapy for pediatric irritability: Theory and potential mechanisms.

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Review 9.  The genetics of anxiety-related negative valence system traits.

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10.  Placental Gene Expression and Offspring Temperament Trajectories: Predicting Negative Affect in Early Childhood.

Authors:  J Finik; J Buthmann; W Zhang; K Go; Y Nomura
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