Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk

Offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (BD) are at high risk for psychiatric disorders, but mechanisms conferring risk are not well understood. Identifying and understanding factors that increase offspring vulnerability may inform intervention efforts. Three studies examined the following risk f...

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Main Author: Freed, Rachel Deborah
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15247
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-152472019-03-15T03:22:31Z Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk Freed, Rachel Deborah Clinical psychology Bipolar disorder Course characteristics Family functioning High-risk offspring Obstetrical complications Risk factors Offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (BD) are at high risk for psychiatric disorders, but mechanisms conferring risk are not well understood. Identifying and understanding factors that increase offspring vulnerability may inform intervention efforts. Three studies examined the following risk factors: (1) obstetric complications (OCs); (2) family functioning; and (3) clinical characteristics of parental BD. Investigations included cross-sectional data from two Massachusetts General Hospital studies of 109 BD parents and 206 offspring. Study 1 examined associations between: (1) maternal lifetime comorbid anxiety and OCs in pregnancy/delivery; (2) OCs and development of offspring psychopathology. Associations emerged between maternal anxiety and OCs. OCs, particularly during delivery, also correlated with offspring anxiety disorders. Path analyses revealed that delivery complications mediated the relationship between maternal and offspring anxiety. Study 2 examined associations between family functioning (cohesion, expressiveness, conflict) and offspring psychopathology, and explored moderation by offspring age and sex. Higher conflict and lower cohesion correlated with offspring internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Lower cohesion correlated with offspring mood disorders. Moderation analyses indicated that the link between cohesion and internalizing symptoms was stronger for younger compared to older children. Also, conflict and mood disorder were associated in younger boys, but not in older boys or in girls. Study 3 classified parents according to BD course presentation using latent class analysis, and examined associations between parental class membership and offspring psychopathology. The best-fitting model yielded three parent groups that were based on 8 illness characteristics. Some notable patterns differentiated classes: Class 1 and 2 parents had earlier illness onset, whereas Class 3 parents had later onset; Class 2 consisted of parents with Bipolar-II Disorder, whereas Class 1 parents had Bipolar-I Disorder. Class differences emerged for offspring anxiety disorders, but only among females. Class 3 parents had girls with fewer anxiety disorders compared to the other classes, with girls of Class 2 parents at greatest risk. Altogether, these studies identify several specific environmental mechanisms that increase psychopathology risk in offspring of BD parents. Such findings have important implications for targeted prevention and intervention. 2016-03-22T15:29:58Z 2016-03-22T15:29:58Z 2014 2016-03-12T07:10:21Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15247 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical psychology
Bipolar disorder
Course characteristics
Family functioning
High-risk offspring
Obstetrical complications
Risk factors
spellingShingle Clinical psychology
Bipolar disorder
Course characteristics
Family functioning
High-risk offspring
Obstetrical complications
Risk factors
Freed, Rachel Deborah
Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
description Offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (BD) are at high risk for psychiatric disorders, but mechanisms conferring risk are not well understood. Identifying and understanding factors that increase offspring vulnerability may inform intervention efforts. Three studies examined the following risk factors: (1) obstetric complications (OCs); (2) family functioning; and (3) clinical characteristics of parental BD. Investigations included cross-sectional data from two Massachusetts General Hospital studies of 109 BD parents and 206 offspring. Study 1 examined associations between: (1) maternal lifetime comorbid anxiety and OCs in pregnancy/delivery; (2) OCs and development of offspring psychopathology. Associations emerged between maternal anxiety and OCs. OCs, particularly during delivery, also correlated with offspring anxiety disorders. Path analyses revealed that delivery complications mediated the relationship between maternal and offspring anxiety. Study 2 examined associations between family functioning (cohesion, expressiveness, conflict) and offspring psychopathology, and explored moderation by offspring age and sex. Higher conflict and lower cohesion correlated with offspring internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Lower cohesion correlated with offspring mood disorders. Moderation analyses indicated that the link between cohesion and internalizing symptoms was stronger for younger compared to older children. Also, conflict and mood disorder were associated in younger boys, but not in older boys or in girls. Study 3 classified parents according to BD course presentation using latent class analysis, and examined associations between parental class membership and offspring psychopathology. The best-fitting model yielded three parent groups that were based on 8 illness characteristics. Some notable patterns differentiated classes: Class 1 and 2 parents had earlier illness onset, whereas Class 3 parents had later onset; Class 2 consisted of parents with Bipolar-II Disorder, whereas Class 1 parents had Bipolar-I Disorder. Class differences emerged for offspring anxiety disorders, but only among females. Class 3 parents had girls with fewer anxiety disorders compared to the other classes, with girls of Class 2 parents at greatest risk. Altogether, these studies identify several specific environmental mechanisms that increase psychopathology risk in offspring of BD parents. Such findings have important implications for targeted prevention and intervention.
author Freed, Rachel Deborah
author_facet Freed, Rachel Deborah
author_sort Freed, Rachel Deborah
title Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
title_short Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
title_full Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
title_fullStr Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
title_full_unstemmed Psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
title_sort psychopathology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder: three studies exploring risk
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15247
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