Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders. / Ottesen, Ninja M.; Meluken, Iselin; Scheike, Thomas; Kessing, Lars Vedel; Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica; Vinberg, Maj.

In: Frontiers in Psychiatry, Vol. 9, 401, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ottesen, NM, Meluken, I, Scheike, T, Kessing, LV, Miskowiak, KW & Vinberg, M 2018, 'Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders', Frontiers in Psychiatry, vol. 9, 401. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401

APA

Ottesen, N. M., Meluken, I., Scheike, T., Kessing, L. V., Miskowiak, K. W., & Vinberg, M. (2018). Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 9, [401]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401

Vancouver

Ottesen NM, Meluken I, Scheike T, Kessing LV, Miskowiak KW, Vinberg M. Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders. Frontiers in Psychiatry. 2018;9. 401. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401

Author

Ottesen, Ninja M. ; Meluken, Iselin ; Scheike, Thomas ; Kessing, Lars Vedel ; Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica ; Vinberg, Maj. / Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders. In: Frontiers in Psychiatry. 2018 ; Vol. 9.

Bibtex

@article{dfa2f9d1184246489d726f356125b725,
title = "Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders",
abstract = "Background: Affective disorders have a long-term impact on psychiatric health and are caused by multiple interacting factors including familial risk, childhood adversity, life events and personality traits. Methods: In this study, monozygotic twins (MZ) at familial risk (indexed by affective disorder in their co-twin; high-risk group), affected MZ twins (indexed by a diagnosis with affective disorder) and MZ twins with no family history of affective disorder (low-risk group) were identified through cross-linking of nation-wide Danish registers. In total, 204 MZ twins were included and psychopathology, personality traits and life adversity were evaluated by semi-structured interviews and questionnaires. Results: Affected MZ twins presented with more subclinical affective symptoms and were functionally impaired as evidenced by higher unemployment rates and reduced functional status. The affected and the high-risk groups reported more childhood adversity and had experienced more stressful life events than the low-risk group. A direct comparison within the discordant twin pairs showed that the high-risk twins presented fewer affective symptoms, better functional status, more extraversion and lower neuroticism scores than their affected co-twins although they had equal levels of life adversity as their affected co-twins. Conclusion: These findings add to the evidence indicating that patients experience higher neuroticism, persistent subclinical symptoms and reduced socio-occupational function after affective episodes. Additionally, neuroticism and extraversion seem capable of moderating the sensitivity to exposure from the environment.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, affective symptoms, childhood trauma, life events, monozygotic, traits, twins",
author = "Ottesen, {Ninja M.} and Iselin Meluken and Thomas Scheike and Kessing, {Lars Vedel} and Miskowiak, {Kamilla Woznica} and Maj Vinberg",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Frontiers in Psychiatry",
issn = "1664-0640",
publisher = "Frontiers Research Foundation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinical Characteristics, Life Adversities and Personality Traits in Monozygotic Twins With, at Risk of and Without Affective Disorders

AU - Ottesen, Ninja M.

AU - Meluken, Iselin

AU - Scheike, Thomas

AU - Kessing, Lars Vedel

AU - Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica

AU - Vinberg, Maj

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Background: Affective disorders have a long-term impact on psychiatric health and are caused by multiple interacting factors including familial risk, childhood adversity, life events and personality traits. Methods: In this study, monozygotic twins (MZ) at familial risk (indexed by affective disorder in their co-twin; high-risk group), affected MZ twins (indexed by a diagnosis with affective disorder) and MZ twins with no family history of affective disorder (low-risk group) were identified through cross-linking of nation-wide Danish registers. In total, 204 MZ twins were included and psychopathology, personality traits and life adversity were evaluated by semi-structured interviews and questionnaires. Results: Affected MZ twins presented with more subclinical affective symptoms and were functionally impaired as evidenced by higher unemployment rates and reduced functional status. The affected and the high-risk groups reported more childhood adversity and had experienced more stressful life events than the low-risk group. A direct comparison within the discordant twin pairs showed that the high-risk twins presented fewer affective symptoms, better functional status, more extraversion and lower neuroticism scores than their affected co-twins although they had equal levels of life adversity as their affected co-twins. Conclusion: These findings add to the evidence indicating that patients experience higher neuroticism, persistent subclinical symptoms and reduced socio-occupational function after affective episodes. Additionally, neuroticism and extraversion seem capable of moderating the sensitivity to exposure from the environment.

AB - Background: Affective disorders have a long-term impact on psychiatric health and are caused by multiple interacting factors including familial risk, childhood adversity, life events and personality traits. Methods: In this study, monozygotic twins (MZ) at familial risk (indexed by affective disorder in their co-twin; high-risk group), affected MZ twins (indexed by a diagnosis with affective disorder) and MZ twins with no family history of affective disorder (low-risk group) were identified through cross-linking of nation-wide Danish registers. In total, 204 MZ twins were included and psychopathology, personality traits and life adversity were evaluated by semi-structured interviews and questionnaires. Results: Affected MZ twins presented with more subclinical affective symptoms and were functionally impaired as evidenced by higher unemployment rates and reduced functional status. The affected and the high-risk groups reported more childhood adversity and had experienced more stressful life events than the low-risk group. A direct comparison within the discordant twin pairs showed that the high-risk twins presented fewer affective symptoms, better functional status, more extraversion and lower neuroticism scores than their affected co-twins although they had equal levels of life adversity as their affected co-twins. Conclusion: These findings add to the evidence indicating that patients experience higher neuroticism, persistent subclinical symptoms and reduced socio-occupational function after affective episodes. Additionally, neuroticism and extraversion seem capable of moderating the sensitivity to exposure from the environment.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - affective symptoms

KW - childhood trauma

KW - life events

KW - monozygotic

KW - traits

KW - twins

U2 - 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401

DO - 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00401

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30233425

VL - 9

JO - Frontiers in Psychiatry

JF - Frontiers in Psychiatry

SN - 1664-0640

M1 - 401

ER -

ID: 203084634