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Heritability of health and aging limitations on personally desired activities
Author(s) -
Barry J. Gurland,
William F. Page,
Brent J. Small,
John J. McArdle,
Brenda L. Plassman
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
health psychology research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2420-8124
DOI - 10.4081/hpr.2015.1981
Subject(s) - zygosity , heritability , cognition , twin study , incidence (geometry) , psychology , cohort , cognitive impairment , demography , gerontology , developmental psychology , medicine , clinical psychology , psychiatry , biology , genetics , physics , sociology , optics
The aim of this study is to estimate heritability of incident limitations on personally desired activities within the eighth decade of life. We measured self-rated ability to perform ten personally desired activities in 1606 male veteran twin pairs at baseline and four years later. At follow-up, 33% of the cohort reported more limitations in desired activities. Among twins who completed both assessments, there were no statistically significant differences in incidence rates of limitations as a function of zygosity. Sensitivity tests showed the same for change scores; and that, if cognitive impairment or death are deemed to belong among limitations of desired activities, zygosity contributed 10% to new limitations at follow-up. Maintaining personally desired activities over four years in the eighth decade is not subject to substantial genetic influence. However, if death and cognitive impairment are added to incident limitations, then genetics plays a modest role. In all cases, unique environment is the predominant influence

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