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The heritability of perceived stress

The heritability of perceived stress
The heritability of perceived stress
Background. Exploration of the degree to which perceived chronic stress is heritable is important as these self-reports have been linked to stress-related health outcomes. The aims of this study were to estimate whether perceived stress is a heritable condition and to assess whether heritability estimates vary between subjective stress reactivity and stress related to external demands.
Method. A sample of 103 monozygotic and 77 dizygotic twin pairs completed three questionnaires designed to measure perceived stress: the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Measure for the Assessment of Stress Susceptibility (MESA) and the Trier Inventory for the Assessment of Chronic Stress (TICS). The TICS assesses the frequency of stressful experiences on six scales, the MESA assesses subjective stress reactivity, and the PSS takes both factors into account.
Results. A multivariate model-fitting procedure revealed that a model with common additive genetic and shared environmental factors best fit the eight scales (PSS, MESA, six TICS scales). Heritabilities for the best-fitting model varied between 5% and 45%, depending on the scale.
Conclusions. The present data suggest that perceived stress is in part heritable, that nearly half of the covariance between stress scales is due to genetic factors, and that heritability estimates vary considerably, depending on the questionnaire. Beyond methodological considerations that pertain to the validity of the questionnaires, these data suggest that studies assessing the heritability of perceived chronic stress should take the specific questionnaire focus into account.
0033-2917
375-385
Federenko, Ilona S.
caa45b31-cc1a-4b0b-95c3-6484d90e14a1
Schlotz, Wolff
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Kirschbaum, Clemens
10bb3d6b-9fab-4937-b177-370304abdf00
Bartels, Meike
e9050398-295b-48c2-94aa-ee54e063ffc9
Hellhammer, Dirk H.
e4b56918-8a5e-4b0f-bd70-4cde7edc49c1
Wüst, Stefan
530861ea-05ba-4a73-8030-9735f1759d5b
Federenko, Ilona S.
caa45b31-cc1a-4b0b-95c3-6484d90e14a1
Schlotz, Wolff
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Kirschbaum, Clemens
10bb3d6b-9fab-4937-b177-370304abdf00
Bartels, Meike
e9050398-295b-48c2-94aa-ee54e063ffc9
Hellhammer, Dirk H.
e4b56918-8a5e-4b0f-bd70-4cde7edc49c1
Wüst, Stefan
530861ea-05ba-4a73-8030-9735f1759d5b

Federenko, Ilona S., Schlotz, Wolff, Kirschbaum, Clemens, Bartels, Meike, Hellhammer, Dirk H. and Wüst, Stefan (2006) The heritability of perceived stress. Psychological Medicine, 36 (3), 375-385. (doi:10.1017/S0033291705006616).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background. Exploration of the degree to which perceived chronic stress is heritable is important as these self-reports have been linked to stress-related health outcomes. The aims of this study were to estimate whether perceived stress is a heritable condition and to assess whether heritability estimates vary between subjective stress reactivity and stress related to external demands.
Method. A sample of 103 monozygotic and 77 dizygotic twin pairs completed three questionnaires designed to measure perceived stress: the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Measure for the Assessment of Stress Susceptibility (MESA) and the Trier Inventory for the Assessment of Chronic Stress (TICS). The TICS assesses the frequency of stressful experiences on six scales, the MESA assesses subjective stress reactivity, and the PSS takes both factors into account.
Results. A multivariate model-fitting procedure revealed that a model with common additive genetic and shared environmental factors best fit the eight scales (PSS, MESA, six TICS scales). Heritabilities for the best-fitting model varied between 5% and 45%, depending on the scale.
Conclusions. The present data suggest that perceived stress is in part heritable, that nearly half of the covariance between stress scales is due to genetic factors, and that heritability estimates vary considerably, depending on the questionnaire. Beyond methodological considerations that pertain to the validity of the questionnaires, these data suggest that studies assessing the heritability of perceived chronic stress should take the specific questionnaire focus into account.

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Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 44791
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44791
ISSN: 0033-2917
PURE UUID: cead4465-c6f9-4011-be1f-3b9aadeb530d

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Date deposited: 15 Mar 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:07

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Contributors

Author: Ilona S. Federenko
Author: Wolff Schlotz
Author: Clemens Kirschbaum
Author: Meike Bartels
Author: Dirk H. Hellhammer
Author: Stefan Wüst

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