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Familial eating concerns and psychopathological traits: Causal implications of transgenerational effects
Author(s) -
Steiger Howard,
Stotland Stephen,
Trottier Julie,
Ghadirian A. M.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
international journal of eating disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.785
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1098-108X
pISSN - 0276-3478
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1098-108x(199603)19:2<147::aid-eat5>3.0.co;2-n
Subject(s) - psychopathology , psychology , eating disorders , transgenerational epigenetics , narcissism , proband , anorexia nervosa , bulimia nervosa , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , disordered eating , social psychology , genetics , biology , pregnancy , gene , offspring , mutation
Objective This study extends an earlier investigation on the link between familial traits and eating disorders (EDs), and examines the extent to which selected eating attitudes and psychopathological traits are (a) familial in nature and (b) specific to anorexia‐ and bulimia‐spectrum disorders. Methods: We measured various ED‐relevant dimensions (eating and body image attitudes) and psychopathological traits (e.g., affective instability, narcissism, compulsivity, restricted expression) in the mothers, fathers, and sisters of probands displaying an ED (n = 88), another psychiatric disturbance (n = 42), or neither disturbance (n = 59). Total sample, including relatives, was 553. Results: A principal components analysis (PCA), used to reduce variables and to characterize main sources of variation, yielded three interpretable factors: eating concerns and symptoms (grouping all eating‐related dimensions), dramatic‐erratic traits (grouping affective instability, narcissism, and conceptually related dimensions), and obsessive‐compulsive traits (grouping compulsivity and restricted expression). Correlations among subjects' factor scores (derived from the PCA) showed two types of transgenerational effects: correspondences between daughters' and parents' psychopathological traits, and between daughters' and mothers' eating concerns. Despite these, relatives of ED probands were not discriminable on any factor score from relatives of controls. Discussion: These results imply that transgenerational effects exist on eating attitudes and psychopathological traits, but do not uniquely identify families in which clinical ED syndromes occur. © 1996 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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