Vulnerability to post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and depression runs in families
Released: Just like veterans of war, earthquake survivors
can experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and anxiety.
In 1988, a massive earthquake in Armenia killed 17,000 people and destroyed nearly
half the town of Gumri. Now, in the first multigenerational study of its kind,
UCLA researchers studying survivors of that catastrophe have discovered that vulnerability
to PTSD, anxiety and depression runs in families.
Armen Goenjian, a research psychiatrist in the UCLA Department
of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, and colleagues studied 200 participants
from 12 multigenerational families exposed to the earthquake. Participants suffered
from varying degrees of the disorders. The researchers found that 41 percent of
the variation of PTSD symptoms was due to genetic factors and that 61 percent
of the variation of depressive symptoms and 66 percent of anxiety symptoms were
attributable to genetics. Further, they found that a large proportion of the genetic
liabilities for the disorders were shared.
The research appears in the December issue of the journal
Psychiatric Genetics.
"This was a study of multigenerational family members
- parents and offspring, grandparents and grandchildren, siblings, and so on -
and we found that the genetic makeup of some of these individuals renders them
more vulnerable to develop PTSD, anxiety and depressive symptoms," said Goenjian,
a member of the UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress
and lead author of the study.
In addition, Goenjian noted, the study suggests that
a large percentage of genes are shared between the disorders. "That tracks
with clinical experience," he said. "For example, in clinical practice,
the therapist will often discover that patients who come in for treatment of depression
have coexisting anxiety. Our findings show that a substantial portion of the coexistence
can be explained on the basis of shared genes and not just environmental factors
such as upbringing."
The researchers used statistical methods to assess heritabilities.
One method was used to determine the genetic component of a disorder such as PTSD.
Then, a separate analysis was used to see if different phenotypes shared genes.
The results showed that a significant amount of genes are shared between PTSD
and depression, PTSD and anxiety, and finally depression and anxiety.
Until now, Goenjian said, the only studies that have
suggested such a heritability of PTSD have been twin studies.
"It's very hard to do family studies on PTSD because
typically only single individuals, not whole families, are exposed to a particular
trauma," he said. "In our study, we were able to avert this problem
since all the subjects were exposed to the same severe trauma at the same time."
In fact, he said, the 200 participants all saw destroyed
buildings throughout Gumri, 90 percent witnessed dead bodies left lying in the
streets and 92 percent witnessed severely injured people.
The findings are promising for the next step in understanding
the underlying biology of these disorders, which is locating the specific genes
involved, Goenjian said.
Other authors on the paper included Julia N. Bailey,
Ida S. Karayana, Ernest P. Noble and Terry Ritchie, all of UCLA; David P. Walling
from the Collaborative Neuroscience Network; and Haig A. Goenjian from the Tulane
University School of Medicine.
Funding for the study was provided by the Collaborative
Neuroscience Network. The researchers report no conflicts of interest.
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