Somatization is known to be more prevalent in Asian than in Western populations. Using a South Korean adolescent and young adult twin sample (N = 1754; 367 monozygotic male, 173 dizygotic male, 681 monozygotic female, 274 dizygotic female and 259 opposite-sex dizygotic twins), the present study aimed to estimate heritability of somatization and to determine common genetic and environmental influences on somatization and hwabyung (HB: Anger syndrome). Twins completed self-report questionnaires of the HB symptoms scale and the somatization scale via a telephone interview. The results of the general sex-limitation model showed that 43% (95% CI [36, 50]) of the total variance of somatization was attributable to additive genetic factors, with the remaining variance, 57% (95% CI [50, 64]), being due to individual-specific environmental influences, including measurement error. These estimates were not significantly different between the two sexes. The phenotypic correlation between HB and somatization was.53 (p
CITATION STYLE
Hur, Y. M., Jin, H. J., Lee, S., & Kim, J. W. (2019). Shared genetic etiology of Hwabyung (Anger Syndrome) and somatization symptoms in South Korean adolescent and young adult twins. Twin Research and Human Genetics, 22(2), 114–119. https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2019.6
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