Authors
J John Mann, Victoria A Arango, Shelli Avenevoli, David A Brent, Frances A Champagne, Paula Clayton, Dianne Currier, Donald M Dougherty, Fatemah Haghighi, Susan E Hodge, Joel Kleinman, Thomas Lehner, Francis McMahon, Eve K Mościcki, Maria A Oquendo, Ganshayam N Pandey, Jane Pearson, Barbara Stanley, Joseph Terwilliger, Amy Wenzel
Publication date
2009/4/1
Source
Biological psychiatry
Volume
65
Issue
7
Pages
556-563
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Twin, adoption, and family studies have established the heritability of suicide attempts and suicide. Identifying specific suicide diathesis-related genes has proven more difficult. As with psychiatric disorders in general, methodological difficulties include complexity of the phenotype for suicidal behavior and distinguishing suicide diathesis-related genes from genes associated with mood disorders and other suicide-associated psychiatric illness. Adopting an endophenotype approach involving identification of genes associated with heritable intermediate phenotypes, including biological and/or behavioral markers more proximal to genes, is an approach being used for other psychiatric disorders. Therefore, a workshop convened by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University, and the National Institute of Mental Health sought to identify potential target …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JJ Mann, VA Arango, S Avenevoli, DA Brent… - Biological psychiatry, 2009