Genetics of Bipolar
Disorder
Bipolar Disorder Runs in Families
(October 2003) --
Bipolar disorder
is often considered a condition that reflects
genetic influence. A new twin
study reveals just how genetic the disorder is.
If one identical twin develops
bipolar disorder, the likelihood of the other twin developing the condition is
85 to 89%. The high probability of double trouble comes not from the environment
the twins inhabited together while they were developing but from the genes they
share, reports a team of British and Canadian investigators. Only15% of
instances of bipolar disorder can be attributed to factors specific to
individuals or to their unique life experiences outside the family of origin.
What's more, the genetic loading for
bipolar disorder is restricted to liability to mania.
Interestingly, the study also
demonstrates that unipolar depression is not simply a less severe form of
bipolar disorder. Only 10% of twins with unipolar
major depression had a
co-twin
with bipolar depression.
Nevertheless, there is some genetic
overlap; susceptibility to bipolar disorder seems to make sufferers susceptible
to unipolar depression as well. Fifty percent of the co-twins with bipolar
disorder also had unipolar disorder.
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