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Genetic and environmental influences on variation in balance performance among female twin pairs aged 21-82 years

journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by N El Haber, K Hill, A M Cassano, L Paton, R MacInnis, Jisheng Cui, J Hopper, J Wark
Genetic and environmental influences on variation in balance performance were measured in 93 monozygous and 83 dizygous female twin pairs aged 21–82 years (mean age, 50.5 years) in Melbourne, Australia, between 1999 and 2003. The authors administered clinical (Lord's Balance Test and Step Test) and laboratory tests of static and dynamic balance from the Chattecx Balance System with and without distractor tasks. The authors conducted factor analysis and estimated genetic and environmental variance components and heritability (defined as additive genetic variance as a proportion of all variance, after adjustment for age) using a multivariate normal model with the statistical package FISHER. Three factors were identified and adjusted for age. Heritability was 46% (standard error (SE), 9) for the "sensory balance tests" factor and 30% (SE, 9) for the "static and dynamic perturbations" factor. For both factors, the remaining variance was attributed to unique environmental effects. There was no evidence that genetic factors influenced variation in the "dynamic weight shift tests" factor, with environmental effects shared by twins accounting for 38% (SE, 7) of variance. Neither genetic nor environmental proportions of variance differed significantly between twin subgroups by age (≤50/>50 years). An age-related decline in performance measures was found across the whole sample. These results imply that balance impairments may have a heritable element.

History

Journal

American journal of epidemiology

Volume

164

Issue

3

Pagination

246 - 256

Publisher

Oxfod University Press

Location

Cary, N.C.

ISSN

0002-9262

eISSN

1476-6256

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health