Family History Studies. II Sex Differences and Alcoholism in Primary Affective Illness
- 1 September 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 113 (502) , 973-979
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.113.502.973
Abstract
In previous communications (6, 9) we have presented data indicating that affective disorder (manic depressive disease, involutional depressive reaction, neurotic depressive reaction, psychotic depressive reaction) is more frequent in females than in males. More specifically, in a total sample of 366 affective disorder probands there was a ratio of 1·9 females to every male; and in the parents of the probands a statistically significant excess of mothers as compared to fathers was found to have suffered from the same illness. Calculations done on the same proband group revealed that alcoholism was significantly more prevalent in the fathers and siblings of the affective disorder group than in a matched control series. It appeared that if one added the alcoholic fathers to the affectively disordered fathers one found a prevalence of psychiatric illness in fathers which was similar to the prevalence of affective disorder itself in the mothers. Thus, it seemed that the deficiency in affective disorder diagnoses in fathers was made up by alcoholism.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Affective disorder—VII: Alcoholism and affective disorderJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1966
- Affective disorder: VI. A family history study of prevalences, sex differences and possible genetic factorsJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1965
- THE COMMUNICATION OF SUICIDAL INTENT PRIOR TO PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITALIZATION: A STUDY OF 87 PATIENTSAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1961
- CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS IN MANIC-DEPRESSIVE DISEASEJAMA, 1957
- Zur Erbpathologie des manisch-depressiven Irreseins. Die Eltern und Kinder von Manisch-DepressivenZeitschrift für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, 1938