Shared genetic etiology of Hwabyung (Anger Syndrome) and somatization symptoms in South Korean adolescent and young adult twins

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Abstract

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

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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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