252 results on '"twins"'
Search Results
2. Exploring Hematological and Biochemical Disparities in Same-Sex and Opposite-Sex Females: A Cross-Sectional Twin Study in a Ghanaian Population.
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Banyeh, Moses, Mayeem, Benjamin N., Woli, Moses Kofi, Kolekang, Augusta S., Dagungong, Clement Binwatin, Bure, David, Wemegah, Romarick Kofi, Azindow, Mikail Ihsan, Yakubu, Suleman, Seidu, Musah, Baba, Mohammed Madde, Essoun, Elisha, and Owireduwaa, Nancy
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LDL cholesterol , *TWIN studies , *CROSS-sectional method , *PRENATAL exposure , *FEMALES , *CONJOINED twins , *GHANAIANS - Abstract
There are sex-dependent differences in hematological and biochemical variables in adulthood attributed to the predominant effects of testosterone in males and estrogen in females. The Twin Testosterone Transfer (TTT) hypothesis proposes that opposite-sex females may develop male-typical traits due to exposure to relatively higher levels of prenatal testosterone than same-sex females. Additionally, prenatal testosterone exposure has been suggested as a correlate of current circulating testosterone levels. Consequently, opposite-sex females might exhibit male-typical patterns in their hematological and biochemical variables. Despite this hypothesis, routine laboratory investigations assign the same reference range to all females. Our cross-sectional study, conducted in Tamale from January to September 2022, included 40 twins, comprising 10 opposite-sex (OS) males (25%), 10 OS females (25%), and 20 same-sex (SS) females (50%), all aged between 18 and 27 years. Fasting venous blood samples were collected and analyzed using automated hematology and biochemistry laboratory analyzers. Results indicated that levels of hemoglobin, serum creatinine, gamma-glutamyl transferase, total protein, globulins, and total testosterone were significantly higher in OS males than OS females. Conversely, total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol were significantly higher in OS females than OS males. Unexpectedly, levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and total testosterone were significantly higher in SS females than OS females. Contrary to expectations, opposite-sex females did not exhibit male-typical patterns in their hematological and biochemical variables. This suggests that the TTT effect may not occur or may not be strong enough to markedly affect hematological and biochemical variables in OS females. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Born Apart, but Raised Together: Twins Delivered in Different Countries/Twin Research Reviews: Hallermann-Streiff Syndrome in Monozygotic (MZ) Twins; Effects of Technology on Conjoined Twin Separation; Reciprocal DIEP Transplantation Between MZ Twins; Guidelines for Multifetal Management/Media Reports: Book by World's Oldest Auschwitz-Birkenau Twin Survivor; Passing of Ian Wilmut; Zhores Medvedev Was an Identical Twin; More Gay Fathers with Twin Sons; Twins and Siblings Admitted to Medical School; First and Fourth Records for Major League Baseball Twins
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Segal, Nancy L.
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CONJOINED twins , *TWINS , *TWIN studies , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDICAL schools - Abstract
The circumstances and subsequent life events of the first twins to have been born in different countries are examined. Given that both twins were born in the United Kingdom, their common citizenship was never questioned. In contrast, twins born in Canada to a legally married gay transnational couple — composed of one American and one Israeli — were assigned as citizens of different nations and their parents were regarded as if unmarried. This essay is followed by reviews of research on the Hallermann-Streiff syndrome in monozygotic (MZ) twins, the effects of technology on conjoined twin separation, reciprocal deep inferior epigastric perforator (DIEP) transplantation in MZ twins and new guidelines for managing multifetal pregnancies. Finally, media reports on a book by the world's oldest Auschwitz-Birkenau twin survivor, the passing of Dr Ian Wilmut, the identical twinship of Zhores Medvedev, another case of gay fathers with twin sons, twins and siblings admitted to medical school, and the first and fourth records for major league baseball twins are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Twin Research and Human Genetics – News, Views & Comments: Memoirs and Autobiographies by Twins: Research Angles and Human Interest/Twin Research Reviews: Fetal Reduction in Twin Pregnancy; Twins' Personality and Military Service; Growth Restriction in Twins; Advances in Conjoined Twin Separation/Media Reports: Update on Scientist Who Performed Gene Editing on Twins; Twins From 33-Year-Old Embryos; Twins' Outcomes From Dietary Differences; Fraternal Twins With the World's Largest Height Difference; Twin Home Experts Conquer Rat Infestation
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Segal, Nancy L.
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CONJOINED twins , *MULTIPLE pregnancy , *TWINS , *TWIN studies , *FETAL development , *FETAL growth retardation , *MILITARY service , *HUMAN genetics , *GENOME editing - Abstract
Twins' memoirs and autobiographies both enlighten and entertain. These works, often overlooked by researchers, may suggest new avenues for investigation, such as nonshared environmental events that propel twins in different directions. Of course, MZ twins' generally parallel experiences and DZ twins generally criss-crossing paths are the bases of fascinating life stories. The following sections examined recent research on fetal reduction in twin pregnancy, twins' personality and military service, growth restriction in twins, and advances in conjoined twin separation. This article closes with reports of a scientist who performed gene editing on twins, a twin conception from 33-year-old embryos, twins' physical outcomes from dietary differences, fraternal twins with the world's largest height difference and the Twin Home Experts who conquer rat infestation in New York. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Genetic and Environmental Influences on Serum Alanine Aminotransferase Level: A Chinese Twin Study.
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Li, Jingxian, Kang, Xiao, Zhang, Tianhao, Wang, Weijing, Xu, Chunsheng, Duan, Haiping, Tian, Xiaocao, and Zhang, Dongfeng
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TWIN studies , *ALANINE aminotransferase , *TWINS , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *BODY mass index - Abstract
An abnormal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level is predictive of disease and all-cause mortality and may indicate liver injury. Using twin modeling, the genetic and environmental factors that affect human serum ALT levels have been well studied for the populations in the different countries, and the results showed moderate-to-high heritability. However, the heritability of ALT level has not been explored in Chinese population. Thus, we recruited 369 pairs of twins (233 monozygotic and 136 dizygotic) from the Qingdao Twin Registry in China with a median age of 50 years (40−80 years). Correlation analysis and a structural equation model (SEM) were conducted to evaluate the heritability of ALT level. The data for age, gender, body mass index and alcohol consumption were set as covariates. Intrapair correlation in monozygotic twins was 0.64 (95%CI [.56,.71]) and 0.42 (95% CI [.28,.55]) in dizygotic twins. The SEM analysis indicated that 65% (95% CI [57%, 71%]) of the variation in ALT levels can be explained by additive genetics and 35% (95% CI [29%, 44%]) of the variation is attributed to unique environmental factors or residuals. Shared environmental influences were not significant. In conclusion, serum ALT variations exhibited strong genetic effects. The variation could also be explained by unique environmental factors. However, shared environmental factors have a minor impact on the serum ALT level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Three Patterns of Inheritance of Quantitative Dermatoglyphic Traits: Kosovo Albanian Twin Study.
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Temaj, Gazmend, Škarić-Jurić, Tatjana, Butković, Ana, Behluli, Emir, Zajc Petranović, Matea, and Moder, Angelika
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QUANTITATIVE genetics , *TWIN studies , *GENETIC models , *TWINS , *FETAL development , *GOODNESS-of-fit tests - Abstract
Dermatoglyphs are epidermal ridge configurations on the fingers, palms and soles that are formed during fetal development, and therefore only the intrauterine environment can have any influence on their formation. This study aims at investigating the genetic and environmental contribution in determining quantitative dermatoglyphic traits in 32 monozygotic (MZ) and 35 dizygotic (DZ) same-sex twins from the Albanian population of Kosovo. All genetic analyses were run in the statistical program Mx. After assumptions testing, based on the pattern of MZ-DZ correlations, univariate models were fitted to the data in order to estimate additive genetic (A), common (C) and individual (E) environmental influences for all variables. The exception was the atd-angle for which a model with nonadditive genetic (D) influences was tested, since DZ correlations were less than half of MZ correlations. Goodness of fit of the full ACE or ADE model was compared to the saturated model. The fit of nested models (AE, CE, DE or E) was compared to the full models (ACE or ADE). Our results indicate that additive genetic component strongly contributes to individual differences in finger ridge counts (49-81%), and weakly (0-50%) on the formation of the palmar ridge counts between the palmar triradii a, b, c, and d. The specific pattern found for the atd-angle implies the impact of a nonadditive genetic component, possibly the effect of a major gene. Further, more powered studies are needed to confirm this pattern, especially for resolving the issue of the huge difference in MZ and DZ twin similarity for the atd-angle palmar trait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Abstracts from the 19th International Congress on Twin Studies, 11-14 November 2021.
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TWINS , *ANTERIOR cerebral artery , *SOMATIC embryogenesis , *TWIN studies , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *PSYCHOBIOLOGY - Abstract
Nancy L. Segal California State University, Fullerton, CA, USA I Introduction: i Reared-apart twin research and adoption data have supported genetic influence on general intelligence. I Results: i We included 58 twin pairs with sFGR, with a median gestational age at birth of 31.7 (IQR 29.9-33.8) weeks and a median birth weight for the smaller twin and the larger twin of respectively 1155 grams versus 1725 grams (median birth weight discordance of 32%). MZ twins may exhibit more cooperation and less conflict than do DZ twins, and recent research has associated parenting with parent-reported twin conflict. I Method: i The study sample included young Chinese twins reared apart (CTA, I n i [pairs] = 23), Chinese twins reared together (CTT, I n i [pairs] = 50) and Virtual twins (VT, i.e., same-age unrelated siblings reared together from infancy, I n i [pairs] = 169). I Methods: i Structural cerebral measurements on neonatal cerebral ultrasound were compared between the smaller twin and larger twin of monochorionic twins with selective fetal growth restriction (sFGR), defined as a birth-weight discordance >=20%, born in our center between 2010-2020. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2021
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8. Mysteries of Monozygosity: Theories and Breakthroughs/Twin Research: Rare Case of Lost Twins; Developing a National Twin Registry; Twins' Language and Gesture Delays; DNA Testing for Vanishing Twins/Media Reports: Identical Twins Discordant for COVID Vaccination; World's Oldest Identical Twins; Olympic Athlete Stand-in; Fraternal Twin Football Players.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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TWINS , *COVID-19 vaccines , *LANGUAGE delay , *TWIN studies , *OLYMPIC athletes - Abstract
The processes that give rise to monozygotic (MZ) twins remain elusive. This article describes various theories of MZ twinning that have been examined over the years, although they continue to be speculative. It has also been impossible to know if a singleton began life as an MZ twin; however, a critical technological breakthrough can now reveal this important birth history information with a high degree of certainty. The section that follows presents reviews of current research regarding rare twin loss, development of a twin registry, twins' communicative delays and DNA testing for vanishing twins. The article concludes with a survey of newsworthy twins, namely identical twins discordant for COVID vaccination, the world's oldest identical twins, an Olympic athletic stand-in and fraternal twin football players. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Conducting Clinical Trials in Twin Populations: A Review of Design, Analysis, Recruitment and Ethical Issues for Twin-Only Trials.
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Yelland, Lisa N., Scurrah, Katrina J., Ferreira, Paulo, Calais-Ferreira, Lucas, Rankin, Monica, Denton, Jane, Harvey, Merryl, Lee, Katherine J., Kendal, Evie, and Craig, Jeffrey M.
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CLINICAL trials , *TWINS , *PATIENT selection , *TWIN studies , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
Although twins often participate in medical research, few clinical trials are conducted entirely in twin populations. The purpose of this review is to demonstrate the substantial benefits and address the key challenges of conducting clinical trials in twin populations, or 'twin-only trials'. We consider the unique design, analysis, recruitment and ethical issues that arise in such trials. In particular, we describe the different approaches available for randomizing twin pairs, highlight the similarity or correlation that exists between outcomes of twins, and discuss the impact of this correlation on sample size calculations and statistical analysis methods for estimating treatment effects. We also consider the role of both monozygotic and dizygotic twins for studying variation in outcomes, the factors that may affect recruitment of twins, and the ethics of conducting trials entirely in twin populations. The advantages and disadvantages of conducting twin-only trials are also discussed. Finally, we recommend that twin-only trials should be considered more often. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Twins with Craniosynostosis: An Unidentified Variant/Twin Research: Kangaroo Care for Premature Twins; Developmental Delay in MZ Twins; Osteosarcoma in One Identical Twin; Controversies in Twin Pregnancy Management/Media Reports: Twin and Triplet Olympians; Twin's Rescue from a Crocodile; Twin Pandas in Japan; Twin Surrogacy; Identical Twins in Pennsylvania.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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TWINS , *MULTIPLE pregnancy , *DEVELOPMENTAL delay , *TWIN studies , *TRIPLETS , *CRANIOSYNOSTOSES , *CROCODILES - Abstract
Craniosynostosis involves the early closure of one or more joints connecting the bones of an infant's skull. A case of young monozygotic (MZ) male twins with an unidentified variant of this condition is described, followed by a summary of relevant published reports. This overview is followed by descriptions of a kangaroo care program for premature twins, developmental delay in an MZ twin pair, osteosarcoma in one MZ twin and controversial issues in the management of multiple pregnancies. Media reports of twin and triplet Olympic athletes, a twin's rescue from a crocodile, the birth of twin pandas in Japan, a case of twin surrogacy and the birth of identical triplets are also presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. The Babytwins Study Sweden (BATSS): A Multi-Method Infant Twin Study of Genetic and Environmental Factors Influencing Infant Brain and Behavioral Development.
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Falck-Ytter, Terje, Hamrefors, Linnea, Siqueiros Sanches, Monica, Portugal, Ana Maria, Taylor, Mark, Li, Danyang, Viktorsson, Charlotte, Hardiansyah, Irzam, Myers, Lynnea, Westberg, Lars, Bölte, Sven, Tammimies, Kristiina, and Ronald, Angelica
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INFANTS , *NEURAL development , *TWIN studies , *EYE tracking , *TWINS , *SALIVA analysis , *BRAIN , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Twin studies can help us understand the relative contributions of genes and environment to phenotypic trait variation, including attentional and brain activation measures. In terms of applying methodologies such as electroencephalography (EEG) and eye tracking, which are key methods in developmental neuroscience, infant twin studies are almost nonexistent. Here, we describe the Babytwins Study Sweden (BATSS), a multi-method longitudinal twin study of 177 MZ and 134 DZ twin pairs (i.e., 622 individual infants) covering the 5-36 month time period. The study includes EEG, eye tracking and genetics, together with more traditional measures based on in-person testing, direct observation and questionnaires. The results show that interest in participation in research among twin parents is high, despite the comprehensive protocol. DNA analysis from saliva samples was possible in virtually all participants, allowing for both zygosity confirmation and polygenic score analyses. Combining a longitudinal twin design with advanced technologies in developmental cognitive neuroscience and genomics, BATSS represents a new approach in infancy research, which we hope to have impact across multiple disciplines in the coming years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Twins Separated at Birth: Across a Country and Around the World/Twin Research: Memorial Tribute to Isaac Blickstein, MD; Infanticide and Sacrifice of Archaic-Aged Twins and Triplets; Prehistoric Twin Burials; Highlights from a Conference on /Media Reports: An Atypical Twin Father; An Actor's Twin Brother; Twin Link to Tulsa, Oklahoma Massacre; Superfetated Twins; Twin Comedians and Script Writers; Indian Twins' Loss to COVID-19.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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COVID-19 , *TWIN studies , *INFANTICIDE , *TWINS , *MASSACRES , *COMEDIANS , *MULTIPLE pregnancy - Abstract
Every reared-apart monozygotic (MZ) twin pair offers a fresh perspective on human developmental questions. This is true regardless of whether the co-twins were raised in the same country or across the globe. The members of two pairs of separated MZ female twins have recently come to attention. In one case the twins were raised by different families in Argentina; in the other case the twins were raised by different families in Sweden and Vietnam. The perceptions and perspectives of these twins are insightful. The twin research section that follows begins with a tribute to our late esteemed colleague, Dr Isaac Blickstein (1953-2020). Research concerning the infanticide and sacrifice of Archaic-aged twins and triplets and prehistoric twin burials is reviewed next. Highlights from a conference focused on the 2018 film Three Identical Strangers are also included in this portion. The final section of this article includes media reports of an atypical twin father, an actor's twin brother, a twin link to the 1921 Tulsa, Oklahoma massacre, the birth of superfetated twins, twin comedians and script writers and Indian twins' tragic loss to COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. The Academic Development Study of Australian Twins (ADSAT): Research Aims and Design.
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Larsen, Sally A., Little, Callie W., Grasby, Katrina, Byrne, Brian, Olson, Richard K., and Coventry, William L.
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TWINS , *SECONDARY schools , *ACQUISITION of data , *LITERACY , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SCHOOLS , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *PHENOTYPES - Abstract
The Academic Development Study of Australian Twins was established in 2012 with the purpose of investigating the relative influence of genes and environments in literacy and numeracy capabilities across two primary and two secondary school grades in Australia. It is the first longitudinal twin project of its kind in Australia and comprises a sample of 2762 twin pairs, 40 triplet sets and 1485 nontwin siblings. Measures include standardized literacy and numeracy test data collected at Grades 3, 5, 7 and 9 as part of the National Assessment Program: Literacy and Numeracy. A range of demographic and behavioral data was also collected, some at multiple longitudinal time points. This article outlines the background and rationale for the study and provides an overview for the research design, sample and measures collected. Findings emerging from the project and future directions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. Current Status of the Vietnam Era Twin Study of Aging (VETSA).
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Kremen, William S., Franz, Carol E., and Lyons, Michael J.
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TWIN studies , *AGING , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *COGNITION disorders , *BIOMARKERS , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) - Abstract
The Vietnam Era Twin Study of Aging (VETSA) is a longitudinal behavioral genetic study with a primary focus on cognitive and brain aging in men, particularly early identification of risk for mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). It comprises a subset of over 1600 twins from the Vietnam Era Twin Registry. Twins live all over the USA. Assessments began when participants were in their 50s. Follow-ups were conducted every 5-6 years, and wave 3 has been completed as of this writing. The age range of participants is narrow (about 10 years). An extensive neurocognitive test battery has added precision in assessing differences in middle-aged adults, and predicting progression to MCI. Young adult cognitive test data (at an average age of 20 years) provide a means of disentangling aging effects from longstanding differences. Genome wide genotyping and plasma assays of AD biomarkers from waves 1 and 3 were conducted in wave 3. These features make the VETSA ideal for studying the heterogeneity of within-individual trajectories from midlife to old age, and for early detection of risk factors for cognitive decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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15. Epigenetic Influences on Neurodevelopment at 11 Years of Age: Protocol for the Longitudinal Peri/Postnatal Epigenetic Twins Study at 11 Years of Age (PETS@11).
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Leong, Pamela, Loke, Yuk Jing, Saffery, Richard, Silk, Tim, Burnett, Alice, Josev, Elisha, Scurrah, Katrina, Theda, Christiane, Czajko, Anna, Pua, Emmanuel PK, Seal, Marc L, and Craig, Jeffrey M
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TWIN studies , *EPIGENETICS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PUERPERIUM , *COGNITION - Abstract
Neurodevelopment is sensitive to genetic and pre/postnatal environmental influences. These effects are likely mediated by epigenetic factors, yet current knowledge is limited. Longitudinal twin studies can delineate the link between genetic and environmental factors, epigenetic state at birth and neurodevelopment later in childhood. Building upon our study of the Peri/postnatal Epigenetic Twin Study (PETS) from gestation to 6 years of age, here we describe the PETS 11-year follow-up in which we will use neuroimaging and cognitive testing to examine the relationship between early-life environment, epigenetics and neurocognitive outcomes in mid-childhood. Using a within-pair twin model, the primary aims are to (1) identify early-life epigenetic correlates of neurocognitive outcomes; (2) determine the developmental stability of epigenetic effects and (3) identify modifiable environmental risk factors. Secondary aims are to identify factors influencing gut microbiota between 6 and 11 years of age to investigate links between gut microbiota and neurodevelopmental outcomes in mid-childhood. Approximately 210 twin pairs will undergo an assessment at 11 years of age. This includes a direct child cognitive assessment, multimodal magnetic resonance imaging, biological sampling, anthropometric measurements and a range of questionnaires on health and development, behavior, dietary habits and sleeping patterns. Data from complementary data sources, including the National Assessment Program - Literacy and Numeracy and the Australian Early Development Census, will also be sought. Following on from our previous focus on relationships between growth, cardiovascular health and oral health, this next phase of PETS will significantly advance our understanding of the environmental interactions that shape the developing brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. The Project Talent Twin and Sibling Study: Zygosity and New Data Collection.
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Prescott, Carol A., Walters, Ellen E., Arpawong, Thalida Em, Zavala, Catalina, Gruenewald, Tara L., and Gatz, Margaret
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TWIN studies , *FAMILY research , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EDUCATION of twins , *COGNITION , *ABILITY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *TWINS , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The Project Talent Twin and Sibling (PTTS) study includes 4481 multiples and their 522 nontwin siblings from 2233 families. The sample was drawn from Project Talent, a U.S. national longitudinal study of 377,000 individuals born 1942-1946, first assessed in 1960 and representative of U.S. students in secondary school (Grades 9-12). In addition to the twins and triplets, the 1960 dataset includes 84,000 siblings from 40,000 other families. This design is both genetically informative and unique in facilitating separation of the 'common' environment into three sources of variation: shared by all siblings within a family, specific to twin-pairs, and associated with school/community-level factors. We term this the GIFTS model for genetics, individual, family, twin, and school sources of variance. In our article published in a previous Twin Research and Human Genetics special issue, we described data collections conducted with the full Project Talent sample during 1960-1974, methods for the recent linking of siblings within families, identification of twins, and the design of a 54-year follow-up of the PTTS sample, when participants were 68-72 years old. In the current article, we summarize participation and data available from this 2014 collection, describe our method for assigning zygosity using survey responses and yearbook photographs, illustrate the GIFTS model applied to 1960 vocabulary scores from more than 80,000 adolescent twins, siblings and schoolmates and summarize the next wave of PTTS data collection being conducted as part of the larger Project Talent Aging Study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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17. Wisconsin Twin Project Overview: Temperament and Affective Neuroscience.
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Schmidt, Nicole L., Lemery-Chalfant, Kathryn, and Goldsmith, H. Hill
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TWIN studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) , *BRAIN imaging , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychopathology , *TEMPERAMENT , *BIRTH certificates , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *NEURORADIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *TWINS , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
The Wisconsin Twin Project encompasses nearly 30 years of longitudinal research that spans infancy to early adulthood. The twin sample was recruited from statewide birth records for birth cohorts 1989-2004. We summarize early recruitment, assessment, retention and recently completed twin neuroimaging studies. In addition to the focal twins, longitudinal data were also collected from two parents and nontwin siblings. Our adolescent and young adult neuroimaging sample (N = 600) completed several previous behavioral and environmental assessments, beginning shortly after birth. The extensive phenotyping is meant to support a range of empirical investigations with potentially differing theoretical perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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18. FinnTwin16: A Longitudinal Study from Age 16 of a Population-Based Finnish Twin Cohort.
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Kaidesoja, Milla, Aaltonen, Sari, Bogl, Leonie H., Heikkilä, Kauko, Kaartinen, Sara, Kujala, Urho M., Kärkkäinen, Ulla, Masip, Guiomar, Mustelin, Linda, Palviainen, Teemu, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H., Rottensteiner, Mirva, Sipilä, Pyry N., Rose, Richard J., Keski-Rahkonen, Anna, and Kaprio, Jaakko
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TWIN studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *PHENOTYPES , *MENTAL health , *FOOD habits , *OBESITY - Abstract
The purpose of this review is to provide a detailed and updated description of the FinnTwin16 (FT16) study and its future directions. The Finnish Twin Cohort comprises three different cohorts: the Older Twin Cohort established in the 1970s and the FinnTwin12 and FT16 initiated in the 1990s. FT16 was initiated in 1991 to identify the genetic and environmental precursors of alcoholism, but later the scope of the project expanded to studying the determinants of various health-related behaviors and diseases in different stages of life. The main areas addressed are alcohol use and its consequences, smoking, physical activity, overall physical health, eating behaviors and eating disorders, weight development, obesity, life satisfaction and personality. To date, five waves of data collection have been completed and the sixth is now planned. Data from the FT16 cohort have contributed to several hundred studies and many substudies, with more detailed phenotyping and collection of omics data completed or underway. FT16 has also contributed to many national and international collaborations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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19. Justifying Separate Experiences for Twins: Dorothy Burlingham's Classic Twin Study/Twin Research Reviews: Monozygotic Twins with Maturity-Onset Diabetes, Gene Editing of Chinese Twins, Educational Disadvantage of Early-Born Twins and Developmental Trajectories of Movements in Fetal Twins/In the News: Twins with Nearly Identical License Plates, Rare Case of Fetus-in-Fetu, Twin Brothers Killed at Pearl Harbor, Death of a 96-Year-Old Twin Holocaust Survivor, Death of Male-Female Twin Toddlers in a Heated Car and Confusion of Identical Twin Politicians.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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TWIN studies , *SIBLINGS , *SEPARATION (Psychology) , *GENOME editing , *TWINS , *HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 , *AUTOMOBILES , *FETUS , *MONOZYGOTIC twins , *CONJOINED twins , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
This article explores the justification for providing separate experiences for twins. The focus is on Dorothy Burlingham's (1952; Twins: A study of three sets of identical twins with 30 charts. London, UK: Imago) classic, in-depth study of three identical twin-pairs. Implications for how twins are raised currently will be examined. Reviews are presented of twin research concerning monozygotic twins with maturity-onset diabetes, gene editing of fetal Chinese twins, educational disadvantage of early-born twins, and developmental trajectories of twins' prenatal movements. Some unusual experiences and situations involving twins that warrant media attention are also summarized. They include twins with nearly identical license plates, a rare case of fetus-in-fetu, twin brothers killed at Pearl Harbor, the death of a 96-year-old twin Holocaust survivor, the accidental death of male-female twin toddlers in a heated car and confusion over identical twin politicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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20. The Netherlands Twin Register: Longitudinal Research Based on Twin and Twin-Family Designs.
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Ligthart, Lannie, van Beijsterveldt, Catharina E.M., Kevenaar, Sofieke T., de Zeeuw, Eveline, van Bergen, Elsje, Bruins, Susanne, Pool, René, Helmer, Quinta, van Dongen, Jenny, Hottenga, Jouke-Jan, van't Ent, Dennis, Dolan, Conor V., Davies, Gareth E., Ehli, Erik A., Bartels, Meike, Willemsen, Gonneke, de Geus, Eco J.C., and Boomsma, Dorret I.
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TWIN studies , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) , *BIOBANKS , *INTERGENERATIONAL households , *GENEALOGY - Abstract
The Netherlands Twin Register (NTR) is a national register in which twins, multiples and their parents, siblings, spouses and other family members participate. Here we describe the NTR resources that were created from more than 30 years of data collections; the development and maintenance of the newly developed database systems, and the possibilities these resources create for future research. Since the early 1980s, the NTR has enrolled around 120,000 twins and a roughly equal number of their relatives. The majority of twin families have participated in survey studies, and subsamples took part in biomaterial collection (e.g., DNA) and dedicated projects, for example, for neuropsychological, biomarker and behavioral traits. The recruitment into the NTR is all inclusive without any restrictions on enrollment. These resources - the longitudinal phenotyping, the extended pedigree structures and the multigeneration genotyping - allow for future twin-family research that will contribute to gene discovery, causality modeling, and studies of genetic and cultural inheritance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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21. The Mid-Atlantic Twin Registry of Virginia Commonwealth University.
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Lilley, Emily C. H., Morris, Anne-Taylor, and Silberg, Judy L.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *BIRTH certificates , *ACQUISITION of data , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychopathology , *HUMAN microbiota , *EPIGENETICS , *BULLYING , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GENES , *HISTORY , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SMOKING , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *TUMORS , *TWINS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The Mid-Atlantic Twin Registry (MATR) is a population-based registry of more than 60,000 twins primarily born or living in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Researchers may utilize the MATR for administration of research services, including study recruitment, data or sample (e.g., DNA) collection, archival dataset creation, as well as data collection through mailed, phone or online surveys. In addition, the MATR houses the MATR Repository, with over 1700 DNA samples primarily from whole blood available for researchers interested in DNA genotyping. For over 40 years MATR twins have participated in research studies with investigators from a range of scientific disciplines and institutions. These studies, which have resulted in numerous publications, explored diverse topics, including substance use, smoking behaviors, developmental psychopathology, bullying, children's health, cardiovascular disease, cancer, the human microbiome, epigenetics of aging, children of twins and sleep homeostasis. Researchers interested in utilizing twins are encouraged to contact the MATR to discuss potential research opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Pennsylvania Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (PALSPAC) Twin Registry.
- Author
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Ramos, Amanda M., Chen, Tong, Hatemi, Peter K., Cleveland, H. Harrington, and Neiderhiser, Jenae M.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) , *MULTIPLE birth , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *PARENTING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PARENTS , *RESEARCH , *TWINS , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
The Pennsylvania Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children Twin Registry was developed to capture a representative sample of multiple births and their parents in the state of Pennsylvania. The registry has two main efforts. The first began in 2012 through recruitment of adolescents in Pennsylvania schools. The second effort began in January 2019 in partnership with the Pennsylvania Department of Health to capture the birth cohort of twins born from 2007 to 2017. Study recruitment, sample demographics, focus and measures are provided, as well as future directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Nordic Twin Study on Cancer - NorTwinCan.
- Author
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Harris, Jennifer R., Hjelmborg, Jacob, Adami, Hans-Olov, Czene, Kamila, Mucci, Lorelei, Kaprio, Jaakko, and Nordic Twin Study of Cancer (NorTwinCan) Collaboration
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *DISEASES in twins , *FAMILIAL diseases , *CANCER , *ETIOLOGY of cancer - Abstract
Nordic twin studies have played a critical role in understanding cancer etiology and elucidating the nature of familial effects on site-specific cancers. The NorTwinCan consortium is a collaborative effort that capitalizes on unique research advantages made possible through the Nordic system of registries. It was constructed by linking the population-based twin registries of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden to their country-specific national cancer and cause-of-death registries. These linkages enable the twins to be followed many decades for cancer incidence and mortality. To date, two major linkages have been conducted: NorTwinCan I in 2011-2012 and NorTwinCan II in 2018. Overall, there are 315,413 eligible twins, 57,236 incident cancer cases and 58 years of follow-up, on average. In the initial phases of our work, NorTwinCan established the world's most comprehensive twin database for studying cancer, developed novel analytical approaches tailored to address specific research considerations within the context of the Nordic data and leveraged these models and data in research publications that provide the most accurate estimates of heritability and familial risk of cancers reported in the literature to date. Our findings indicate an excess familial risk for nearly all cancers and demonstrate that the incidence of cancer among twins mirrors the rate in the general population. They also revealed that twin concordance for cancer most often manifests across, rather than within, cancer sites, and we are currently focusing on the analysis of these cross-cancer associations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. TwinssCan - Gene-Environment Interaction in Psychotic and Depressive Intermediate Phenotypes: Risk and Protective Factors in a General Population Twin Sample.
- Author
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Pries, Lotta-Katrin, Snijders, Clara, Menne-Lothmann, Claudia, Decoster, Jeroen, van Winkel, Ruud, Collip, Dina, Delespaul, Philippe, De Hert, Marc, Derom, Catherine, Thiery, Evert, Jacobs, Nele, Wichers, Marieke, Guloksuz, Sinan, van Os, Jim, and Rutten, Bart P. F.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *PSYCHOSES , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *TWIN psychology - Abstract
Meta-analyses suggest that clinical psychopathology is preceded by dimensional behavioral and cognitive phenotypes such as psychotic experiences, executive functioning, working memory and affective dysregulation that are determined by the interplay between genetic and nongenetic factors contributing to the severity of psychopathology. The liability to mental ill health can be psychometrically measured using experimental paradigms that assess neurocognitive processes such as salience attribution, sensitivity to social defeat and reward sensitivity. Here, we describe the TwinssCan, a longitudinal general population twin cohort, which comprises 1202 individuals (796 adolescent/young adult twins, 43 siblings and 363 parents) at baseline. The TwinssCan is part of the European Network of National Networks studying Gene-Environment Interactions in Schizophrenia project and recruited from the East Flanders Prospective Twin Survey. The main objective of this project is to understand psychopathology by evaluating the contribution of genetic and nongenetic factors on subclinical expressions of dimensional phenotypes at a young age before the onset of disorder and their association with neurocognitive processes, such as salience attribution, sensitivity to social defeat and reward sensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Norwegian Twin Registry.
- Author
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Nilsen, Thomas, Brandt, Ingunn, and Harris, Jennifer R.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *HEALTH information exchanges , *BIRTH certificates , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
The Norwegian Twin Registry (NTR) is maintained as a research resource that was compiled by merging several panels of twin data that were established for research into physical and mental health, wellbeing and development. NTR is a consent-based registry. Where possible, data that were collected in previous studies are curated for secondary research use. A particularly valuable potential benefit associated with the Norwegian twin data lies in the opportunities to expand and enhance the data through record linkage to nationwide registries that cover a wide array of health data and other information, including socioeconomic factors. This article provides a brief description of the current NTR sample and data collections, information about data access procedures and an overview of the national registries that can be linked to the NTR for research projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Chinese National Twin Registry: A Unique Data Source for Systems Epidemiology of Complex Disease.
- Author
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Huang, Tao, Gao, Wenjing, Lv, Jun, Yu, Canqing, Wu, Tao, Wang, Shengfeng, Liao, Chunxiao, Meng, Lu, Wang, Dongmeng, Wang, Zhaonian, Pang, Zengchang, Yu, Min, Wang, Hua, Wu, Xianping, Dong, Zhong, Wu, Fan, Jiang, Guohong, Wang, Xiaojie, Liu, Yu, and Deng, Jian
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *BIRTH certificates , *BIOBANKS , *PUBLIC health , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
The Chinese National Twin Registry (CNTR), initiated in 2001, has now become the largest twin registry in Asia. From 2015 to 2018, the CNTR continued to receive Chinese government funding and had recruited 61,566 twin-pairs by 2019 to study twins discordant for specific exposures such as environmental factors, and twins discordant for disease outcomes or measures of morbidity. Omic data, including genetics, genomics, metabolomics, and proteomics, and gut microbiome will be tested. The integration of omics and digital technologies in public health will advance our understanding of precision public health. This review introduces the updates of the CNTR, including study design, sample size, biobank, zygosity assessment, advances in research and future systems epidemiologic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The New West Japan Twins and Higher Order Multiple Births Registry.
- Author
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Yokoyama, Yoshie
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *MULTIPLE birth , *TRIPLETS , *BODY size , *CHILD development , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) - Abstract
The new West Japan Twins and Higher Order Multiple Births Registry was established by recruiting young twins and multiple births and by referrals from public health centers in the 1990s. The participants included in the survey comprised over 7800 twins and 4241 higher order multiples, and their families. Specifically, the present registry contains one of the largest triplet samples in the world. For these twins and multiples, data on year of delivery, mode of delivery, gestational age, intrapartum complications, longitudinal physical measures, motor milestones, cerebral palsy and feeding methods were obtained from records in the Maternal and Child Health Handbooks and schools. Participating mothers were asked to indicate family structure, parental educational history, maternal sleeping time, maternal health condition, maternal and paternal age at multiple delivery, complications during pregnancy, handedness of multiples and age at menarche of multiples. However, the zygosity differed among the various collaborating public health centers according to factors such as the time of investigation. Follow-up questionnaires have been mailed out every 3-4 years for longitudinal studies. This article describes the goals of this registry, recruitment of multiples and the focus of the study. The goals of this registry are not only to conduct research on human genetics and maternal and child health, but also to contribute to providing appropriate information for families with multiples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The National Project on Achievement in Twins.
- Author
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Hart, Sara A., Martinez, Kim, Kennedy, Patrick C., Ganley, Colleen M., and Taylor, Jeanette
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *ACADEMIC achievement , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *EDUCATION of twins , *ELEMENTARY education - Abstract
The National Project on Achievement in Twins (NatPAT) began in 2017 as part of the third funding cycle of the Florida Learning Disabilities Research Center, a program project grant funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Development. NatPAT will have a nationally representative sample of elementary school-aged twins in the United States. The overall goal of the project is to uncover salient factors, including genetic and environmental influences, which contribute to the co-development of reading and math performance during the critical developmental period of elementary school. Here we present the specific aims, methods and materials, and future directions of the project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Avera Twin Register Growing Through Online Consenting and Survey Collection.
- Author
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Kittelsrud, Julie M., Ehli, Erik A., Petersen, Vikki, Jung, Tammy, Beck, Jeffrey J., Kallsen, Noah, Huizenga, Patricia, Holm, Brittany, and Davies, Gareth E.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *BIOBANKS , *GENOMES , *MULTIPLE birth , *GENOTYPES - Abstract
The aim of the Avera Twin Register (ATR) is to establish a prospective longitudinal repository of twins, multiples, siblings and family members' biological samples to study environmental and genetic influences on health and disease. Also, it is our intention to contribute to international genome-wide association study (GWAS) twin consortia when appropriate sample size is achieved within the ATR. The ATR is young compared with existing registers and continues to collect a longitudinal repository of biological specimens, survey data and health information. Data and biological specimens were originally collected via face-to-face appointments or the postal department and consisted of paper-informed consents and questionnaires. Enrollment of the ATR began on May 18, 2016 and is located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, a rural and frontier area in the Central United States with a regional population of approximately 880,000. The original target area for the ATR was South Dakota and the four surrounding states: Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota and Nebraska. The ATR has found a need to expand that area based on twin and multiple siblings who live in various areas surrounding these states. A description of the state of the ATR today and its transition to online data collection and informed consent will be presented. The ATR collects longitudinal data on lifestyle, including diet and activity levels, aging, plus complex traits and diseases. All twins and multiples participating in the ATR are genotyped on the Illumina Global Screening Array and receive zygosity results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Danish Twin Registry: An Updated Overview.
- Author
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Pedersen, Dorthe Almind, Larsen, Lisbeth Aagaard, Nygaard, Marianne, Mengel-From, Jonas, McGue, Matt, Dalgård, Christine, Hvidberg, Lars, Hjelmborg, Jacob, Skytthe, Axel, Holm, Niels V., Kyvik, Kirsten Ohm, and Christensen, Kaare
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *BIRTH certificates , *BIOBANKS , *TWINS - Abstract
The Danish Twin Registry (DTR) was established in the 1950s, when twins born from 1870 to 1910 were ascertained, and has since been extended to include twins from birth cohorts until 2009. The DTR currently comprises of more than 175,000 twins from the 140 birth cohorts. This makes the DTR the oldest nationwide twin register and among the largest in the world. The combination of data from several surveys, including biological samples and repeated measurements on the same individuals, and data from Danish national registers provides a unique resource for a wide range of twin studies. This article provides an updated overview of the data in the DTR: First, we provide a summary of the establishment of the register, the different ascertainment methods and the twins included; then follows an overview of major surveys conducted in the DTR since 1994 and a description of the DTR biobank, including a description of the molecular data created so far; finally, a short description is given of the linkage to Danish national registers at Statistics Denmark and some recent examples of studies using the various data resources in the DTR are highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Michigan State University Twin Registry (MSUTR): 15 Years of Twin and Family Research.
- Author
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Burt, S. Alexandra and Klump, Kelly L.
- Subjects
- *
BIRTH certificates , *TWIN studies , *FAMILY studies , *EPIGENETICS , *HORMONES - Abstract
The primary aim of the Michigan State University Twin Registry (MSUTR) is to examine developmental differences in genetic, environmental, neural, epigenetic, and neurobiological influences on psychopathology and resilience, particularly during childhood and adolescence. The MSUTR has two broad components: a large-scale, population-based registry of child, adolescent, and adult twins and their families (current N ~30,000) and a series of more focused and in-depth studies drawn from the registry (projected N ~7200). Participants in the population-based registry complete a family health and demographic questionnaire via mail. Families can then be recruited for one or more of the intensive, in-person studies from the population-based registry, using any one of several recruitment strategies (e.g., population-based, based on their answers to the registry questionnaire). These latter studies target a variety of biological, genetic, and environmental phenotypes, including multi-informant measures of psychiatric and behavioral phenotypes, functional and structural neuroimaging, comprehensive measures of the twin family environment (e.g., census and neighborhood informant reports of twin neighborhood characteristics, videotaped interactions of child twin families), buccal swab and salivary DNA samples, and/or assays of adolescent and adult steroid hormone levels. This article provides an overview of the MSUTR and describes current and future research directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Washington State Twin Registry: 2019 Update.
- Author
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Duncan, Glen E., Avery, Ally R., Strachan, Eric, Turkheimer, Eric, and Tsang, Siny
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN genetics , *TWINS , *BIRTH certificates , *BIOBANKS , *DEATH certificates - Abstract
It has been over 5 years since the last special issue of Twin Research and Human Genetics on 'Twin Registries Worldwide: An Important Resource for Scientific Research' was published. Much progress has been made in the broad field of twin research since that time, and the current special issue is a follow-up to update the scientific community about twin registries around the globe. The present article builds upon our 2013 Registry description by summarizing current information on the Washington State Twin Registry (WSTR), including history and construction methods, member characteristics, available data, and major research goals. We also provide a section with brief summaries of recently completed studies and discuss the future research directions of the WSTR. The Registry has grown in terms of size and scope since 2013; highlights include recruitment of youth pairs under 18 years of age, extensive geocoding work to develop environmental exposures that can be linked to survey and administrative health data such as death records, and expansion of a biobank with specimens collected for genotyping, DNA methylation, and microbiome based-studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. FinnTwin12 Cohort: An Updated Review.
- Author
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Rose, Richard J., Salvatore, Jessica E., Aaltonen, Sari, Barr, Peter B., Bogl, Leonie H., Byers, Holly A., Heikkilä, Kauko, Korhonen, Tellervo, Latvala, Antti, Palviainen, Teemu, Ranjit, Anu, Whipp, Alyce M., Pulkkinen, Lea, Dick, Danielle M., and Kaprio, Jaakko
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *PHENOTYPES , *EPIGENETICS , *METABOLOMICS , *MENTAL health , *PHYSICAL activity , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
This review offers an update on research conducted with FinnTwin12 (FT12), the youngest of the three Finnish Twin Cohorts. FT12 was designed as a two-stage study. In the first stage, we conducted multiwave questionnaire research enrolling all eligible twins born in Finland during 1983-1987 along with their biological parents. In stage 2, we intensively studied a subset of these twins with in-school assessments at age 12 and semistructured poly-diagnostic interviews at age 14. At baseline, parents of intensively studied twins were administered the adult version of the interview. Laboratory studies with repeat interviews, neuropsychological tests, and collection of DNA were made of intensively studied twins during follow-up in early adulthood. The basic aim of the FT12 study design was to obtain information on individual, familial and school/neighborhood risks for substance use/abuse prior to the onset of regular tobacco and alcohol use and then track trajectories of use and abuse and their consequences into adulthood. But the longitudinal assessments were not narrowly limited to this basic aim, and with multiwave, multirater assessments from ages 11 to 12, the study has created a richly informative data set for analyses of gene-environment interactions of both candidate genes and genomewide measures with measured risk-relevant environments. Because 25 years have elapsed since the start of the study, we are planning a fifth-wave follow-up assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Performing Together: Monozygotic Twin Comedians/Twin research: Mirror-Image Cleft Lip and Palate; Dental Caries; Noninvasive Prenatal testing; Capgras Syndrome with Folie à Deux/In the News: Athletic Twins; Transgendered Twins; Crib-Sharing; Common Careers.
- Author
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Segal, Nancy L.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *CAPGRAS syndrome , *WIT & humor , *COMEDIANS , *ART , *ATHLETES , *CLEFT lip , *CLEFT palate , *DENTAL caries , *PRENATAL diagnosis , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *TWINS , *VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
Twin studies have shown that our sense of humor has an underlying genetic component, but less investigation of the origins of stand-up comedy has been undertaken. This article briefly reviews twin research findings on humor, then describes the working partnership and social affiliation of a pair of monozygotic male twins who perform together as stand-up comedians. The abilities, personalities and temperaments of these twins suggest future avenues for research in this interesting area. Next, findings from twin studies and case reports of twins with cleft lip and palate, dental caries, noninvasive prenatal testing and Capgras syndrome (with folie à deux) are summarized. In conclusion, recent news about athletic twins, transgendered twins, crib-sharing and career choice are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Statistical Power and the Classical Twin Design.
- Author
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Sham, Pak C., Purcell, Shaun M., Cherny, Stacey S., Neale, Michael C., Neale, Benjamin M., Evans, David, Medland, Sarah, and Gillespie, Nathan
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICAL power analysis , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *CHI-square distribution , *TWINS , *GENETICS -- History , *GENETICS , *HISTORY , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Dr Nick Martin has made enormous contributions to the field of behavior genetics over the past 50 years. Of his many seminal papers that have had a profound impact, we focus on his early work on the power of twin studies. He was among the first to recognize the importance of sample size calculation before conducting a study to ensure sufficient power to detect the effects of interest. The elegant approach he developed, based on the noncentral chi-squared distribution, has been adopted by subsequent researchers for other genetic study designs, and today remains a standard tool for power calculations in structural equation modeling and other areas of statistical analysis. The present brief article discusses the main aspects of his seminal paper, and how it led to subsequent developments, by him and others, as the field of behavior genetics evolved into the present era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Symposium in Honor of Irving I. Gottesman (December 29, 1930-June 29, 2016).
- Author
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Segal, Nancy L.
- Subjects
- *
TWINS , *TWIN studies , *GENETICS , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *ACADEMIC achievement , *AWARDS , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *SPECIAL days , *LEADERS - Abstract
The June 2016 death of our esteemed colleague, Dr Irving I. Gottesman, was felt as an extreme loss at so many levels by colleagues, students, friends, and family across the globe. Irv's stellar contributions to the field of twin research will continue to be remembered and cited for many years to come. In commemoration of his life and work, I organized a symposium at the 16th meeting of the International Society for Twin Studies, held in Madrid, Spain, November 16-18, 2017. The panelists included mostly former students, as well as colleagues, who presented their scientific research and personal remarks reflecting Irv's profound influence in shaping their lives and careers. A chronology of Irv's academic positions and honors is included in the introduction to this special issue of Twin Research and Human Genetics, followed by brief sketches of the panel participants; their scholarly papers and personal reflections follow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Definitive Zygosity Scores in the Peas in the Pod Questionnaire is a Sensitive and Accurate Assessment of the Zygosity of Adult Twins.
- Author
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Jarrar, Zakariya A., Ward, Kirsten J., Mangino, Massimo, Cherkas, Lynn F., Gill, Raj, Gillham-Nasenya, Irina, Yarand, Darioush, Hart, Deborah, Hammond, Christopher J., and Spector, Tim D.
- Subjects
- *
TWINS , *ZYGOTES , *GENOTYPES , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ACCURACY , *GENETICS - Abstract
Twin researchers face the challenge of accurately determining the zygosity of twins for research. As part of the annual questionnaire between 1999 and 2006, 8,307 twins from the TwinsUK registry were asked to complete five questions (independently from their co-twin) to ascertain their self-perceived zygosity during childhood on up to five separate occasions. This questionnaire is known as the ‘peas in the pod’ questionnaire (PPQ), but there is little evidence of its validation. Answers were scored and classified as monozygotic (MZ), dizygotic (DZ), or unknown zygosity (UZ) and were compared with 4,484 twins with genotyping data who had not been selected for zygosity. Of these, 3,859 individuals (46.5% of those who had a zygosity from PPQ) had zygosity classified by both the PPQ and genotyping. Of the 708 individual twins whose answers meant that they were consistently classed as MZ in the PPQ, 683 (96.5%) were MZ within the genotype data. Of the 945 individual twins consistently classed as DZ within questionnaire, 936 (99.0%) were DZ in the genotype data. Where both twins scored MZ consistently across multiple questionnaires, 99.6% were MZ on genotyping, 99.7% were DZ on genotyping if both twins consistently scored DZ. However, for the initial questionnaire, 88.6% of those scoring as MZ were genotypically MZ and 98.7% DZ. For twin pairs where both scored UZ, 94.7% were DZ. Using the PPQ on a single occasion provided a definitive classification of whether the twin was MZ or DZ with an overall accuracy of 86.9%, increasing to 97.9% when there was a consistent classification of zygosity across multiple questionnaires. This study has shown that the PPQ questionnaire is an excellent proxy indicator of zygosity in the absence of genotyping information. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Abstracts From the 16th International Congress on Twin Studies and the 4th World Congress on Twin Pregnancy, Madrid, Spain November 16-18, 2017.
- Subjects
- *
TWINS , *MULTIPLE birth , *TWIN studies - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Social Comparison Orientation in Monozygotic and Dizygotic Twins.
- Author
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Huguet, Pascal, Carlier, Michèle, Dolan, Conor V., de Geus, Eco J., and Boomsma, Dorret I.
- Subjects
- *
TWIN studies , *TWINS , *SOCIAL comparison , *SOCIAL perception , *MULTIPLE birth , *DIZYGOTIC twins , *SOCIAL skills - Abstract
Twin research has offered evidence that monozygotic (MZ) twins are more socially close than dizygotic (DZ) twins, but has not paid much attention to the way twins compare themselves with their co-twin. The few studies in this area suggest that ‘horizontal comparisons’ (social comparison motivated by solidarity or communion with others) matter more for MZ twins than for DZ twins, at least when the co-twin is the social comparison standard. Consistent with this view, we predicted higher interest in MZ twins relative to DZ twins to select their co-twin rather than other people in general as the social comparison standard. The Social Comparison Orientation (SCO) scale, which measures the inclination to compare with others in a horizontal rather than vertical mode (comparing either upward or downward), was administered in 90 MZ pairs and 57 same-sex DZ pairs (63% female; average age 18.06 years) from the Netherlands Twin Register. MZ twin pairs showed significantly higher SCO scores than DZ twin pairs (with a large effect size) on the co-twin SCO, whereas the two groups did not differ from each other on the general SCO excluding the co-twin as social comparison standard. In MZ twin pairs, anxiety was associated with social comparison with others in general, not with their co-twin. For both scales, twin resemblance was explained by additive genetic variance. The present findings provide direct evidence that horizontal comparisons with the co-twin are of particular importance for MZ twins. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Heritability and GWAS Analyses of Acne in Australian Adolescent Twins.
- Author
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Mina-Vargas, Angela, Colodro-Conde, Lucía, Grasby, Katrina, Zhu, Gu, Gordon, Scott, Medland, Sarah E., and Martin, Nicholas G.
- Subjects
- *
ACNE , *TWIN studies , *SKIN inflammation , *TWINS , *SEBACEOUS gland diseases , *DISEASE susceptibility , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *PHENOTYPES , *SYMPTOMS , *ACQUISITION of data , *SEQUENCE analysis - Abstract
Acne vulgaris is a skin disease with a multifactorial and complex pathology. While several twin studies have estimated that acne has a heritability of up to 80%, the genomic elements responsible for the origin and pathology of acne are still undiscovered. Here we performed a twin-based structural equation model, using available data on acne severity for an Australian sample of 4,491 twins and their siblings aged from 10 to 24. This study extends by a factor of 3 an earlier analysis of the genetic factors of acne. Acne severity was rated by nurses on a 4-point scale (1 = absent to 4 = severe) on up to three body sites (face, back, chest) and on up to three occasions (age 12, 14, and 16). The phenotype that we analyzed was the most severe rating at any site or age. The polychoric correlation for monozygotic twins was higher (rMZ = 0.86, 95% CI [0.81, 0.90]) than for dizygotic twins (rDZ = 0.42, 95% CI [0.35, 0.47]). A model that includes additive genetic effects and unique environmental effects was the most parsimonious model to explain the genetic variance of acne severity, and the estimated heritability was 0.85 (95% CI [0.82, 0.87]). We then conducted a genome-wide analysis including an additional 271 siblings — for a total of 4,762 individuals. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) scan did not detect loci associated with the severity of acne at the threshold of 5E-08 but suggestive association was found for three SNPs: rs10515088 locus 5q13.1 (p = 3.9E-07), rs12738078 locus 1p35.5 (p = 6.7E-07), and rs117943429 locus 18q21.2 (p = 9.1E-07). The 5q13.1 locus is close to PIK3R1, a gene that has a potential regulatory effect on sebocyte differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Seasonality in Multiple Maternities.
- Author
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Fellman, Johan
- Subjects
- *
MULTIPLE birth , *TWINS , *TRIPLETS , *TWIN studies , *MOTHERHOOD , *DEMOGRAPHY , *MULTIPLE pregnancy , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
In the 19th century, a series of international statistical congresses introduced common rules for the national demographic registers. This activity contributed to the genesis of statistical research. During the history of twin research, Hellin's law has played a central role because it is an approximately correct association between the rates of multiple maternities. However, it has been mathematically proven that Hellin's law cannot hold exactly. The majority of all studies of Hellin's law are based on empirical rates of multiple maternities. Such studies can never confirm the law, but only identify errors too large to be characterized as random. It is of particular interest to examine why the rates of higher multiple maternities are sometimes too high or too low when Hellin's law is used as a benchmark. However, divergences from the law are often difficult to explain and/or eliminate. Different improvements to the law have been proposed. In this article, we study the seasonality of multiple maternities. We apply Hellin's law to compare the seasonality of twin and triplet rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Less is More in Hong Kong: Investigation of Biscriptal and Trilingual Development Among Chinese Twins in a (Relatively) Small City.
- Author
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Wong, Simpson W. L., Ho, Connie Suk-Han, McBride, Catherine, Chow, Bonnie Wing-Yin, and Waye, Mary Miu Yee
- Subjects
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TWINS , *CHILD development , *SMALL cities , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *LANGUAGE & languages , *READING - Abstract
One salient characteristic of twin studies and the related behavioral genetics paradigm is the requirement of a large sample size. Countries or regions that are large in size and highly populated are at an advantage when implementing twin studies. However, given the fascinating and promising results obtained from twin studies, many researchers based in smaller countries or regions may still want to conduct twin studies in order to address local and theoretical issues. In this article, we have outlined the development of twin studies in Hong Kong, one of the Special Administrative Regions of China. The historical development and design of the two major twin studies of language and reading development implemented within Hong Kong are discussed, providing insights to researchers who also aspire to conduct twin studies in small regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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43. The Brazilian Twin Registry.
- Author
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Ferreira, Paulo H., Oliveira, Vinicius C., Junqueira, Daniela R., Cisneros, Lígia C., Ferreira, Lucas C., Murphy, Kate, Ordoñana, Juan R., Hopper, John L., Teixeira-Salmela, Luci F., Cisneros, Lígia C, and Ordoñana, Juan R
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TWINS , *SCIENTIFIC community , *MEDICAL registries , *PHENOTYPES , *HEALTH , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SYMPTOMS , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
The Brazilian Twin Registry (BTR) was established in 2013 and has impelled twin research in South America. The main aim of the initiative was to create a resource that would be accessible to the Brazilian scientific community as well as international researchers interested in the investigation of the contribution of genetic and environmental factors in the development of common diseases, phenotypes, and human behavior traits. The BTR is a joint effort between academic and governmental institutions from Brazil and Australia. The collaboration includes the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) in Brazil, the University of Sydney and University of Melbourne in Australia, the Australian Twin Registry, as well as the research foundations CNPq and CAPES in Brazil. The BTR is a member of the International Network of Twin Registries. Recruitment strategies used to register twins have been through participation in a longitudinal study investigating genetic and environmental factors for low back pain occurrence, and from a variety of sources including media campaigns and social networking. Currently, 291 twins are registered in the BTR, with data on demographics, zygosity, anthropometrics, and health history having been collected from 151 twins using a standardized self-reported questionnaire. Future BTR plans include the registration of thousands of Brazilian twins identified from different sources and collaborate nationally and internationally with other research groups interested on twin studies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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44. What Drives the Development of Social Inequality Over the Life Course? The German TwinLife Study.
- Author
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Hahn, Elisabeth, Gottschling, Juliana, Bleidorn, Wiebke, Kandler, Christian, Spengler, Marion, Kornadt, Anna E., Schulz, Wiebke, Schunck, Reinhardt, Baier, Tina, Krell, Kristina, Lang, Volker, Lenau, Franziska, Peters, Anna-Lena, Diewald, Martin, Riemann, Rainer, and Spinath, Frank M.
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EQUALITY , *SOCIAL stratification , *LIFE chances , *BEHAVIOR genetics , *LIFE course approach , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *FAMILIES , *GENETICS , *TWINS , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
The German twin family study ‘TwinLife’ was designed to enhance our understanding of the development of social inequalities over the life course. The interdisciplinary project investigates mechanisms of social inequalities across the lifespan by taking into account psychological as well as social mechanisms, and their genetic origin as well as the interaction and covariation between these factors. Main characteristics of the study are: (1) a multidimensional perspective on social inequalities, (2) the assessment of developmental trajectories in childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood in a longitudinal design by using (3) a combination of a multi-cohort cross-sequential and an extended twin family design, while (4) capturing a large variation of behavioral and environmental factors in a representative sample of about 4,000 German twin families. In the present article, we first introduce the theoretical and empirical background of the TwinLife study, and second, describe the design, content, and implementation of TwinLife. Since the data will be made available as scientific use file, we also illustrate research possibilities provided by this project to the scientific community. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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45. Protective and Harmful Effects of Physical Activity for Low Back Pain: A Protocol for the AUstralian Twin BACK Pain (AUTBACK) Feasibility Study.
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Pinheiro, Marina B., Ferreira, Manuela L., Refshauge, Kathryn, Hopper, John, Maher, Christopher G., Hartvigsen, Jan, Koes, Bart, Hübscher, Markus, and Ferreira, Paulo H.
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FEASIBILITY studies , *TWIN studies , *ACCELEROMETERS , *PHYSICAL activity , *LUMBAR pain , *PREVENTION , *PHYSIOLOGY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EXERCISE , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *TWINS , *PILOT projects , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data ,PAIN risk factors - Abstract
Low back pain (LBP) is a major health problem globally, but approaches to prevention are not yet clearly identified because modifiable risk factors are not well established. Although physical activity is one promising modifiable risk factor, it is still not known what types and doses of physical activity are protective or harmful for LBP. The aim of this study is to establish the feasibility of a definitive cohort study that will investigate the effects of different types and doses of physical activity on the risk of developing recurrent LBP while accounting for genetic factors. This will be a pilot longitudinal twin study and twins will be recruited from the Australian Twin Registry, and will be followed over 1 year. Thirty adult complete twin pairs with a history of LBP, but symptom free at recruitment, will be included. Data on physical activity (predictor) will be collected using four questionnaires and an objective measure (accelerometer) at baseline and at 6-month follow-up. Twins will also complete an additional physical activity questionnaire monthly. Data on LBP (outcome) will be collected at baseline and weekly. Data will be collected using short message service (SMS) and email. We will keep records of the recruitment rate, follow-up rate, and completeness of data. Barriers to completing the study will be investigated. The results of this study will inform the design and implementation of a future definitive study, which will help to clarify the effects of different types and doses of physical activity on the risk of developing recurrent LBP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
- Full Text
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46. Heritability of Children's Dietary Intakes: A Population-Based Twin Study in China.
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Li, Ji, Liu, Huijuan, Beaty, Terri H., Chen, Hua, Caballero, Benjamin, and Wang, Youfa
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TWIN studies , *HERITABILITY , *PARENTS , *FACTOR analysis , *FOOD consumption , *BIOLOGICAL models , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FOOD preferences , *HUMAN reproduction , *INGESTION , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *TWINS , *EVALUATION research ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Background: Despite evidence for some genetic control of dietary intake in adults, there is little evidence of how genetic factors influence children's dietary patterns.Objective: To estimate heritability of dietary intake in twin children from China and test if genetic effects on dietary intakes vary by the children's socio-economic status (SES).Methods: A sample of 622 twins (162 monozygotic and 149 dizygotic pairs; 298 boys and 324 girls aged 7-15 years) was recruited in South China. Dietary intakes were assessed using a validated 145-item semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. Pooled and sex-specific dietary patterns were identified using factor analysis. Heritability was estimated using structural equation models.Results: Heritable components differed by gender and for nutrients and food groups; and estimated heritability of dietary patterns was generally greater in girls than boys. In boys, estimated heritabilities ranged from 18.8% (zinc) to 58.4% (fat) for nutrients; and for food group, 1.1% (Western fast foods) to 65.8% (soft drinks). In girls, these estimates ranged from 5.1% (total energy) to 38.7% (percentage of energy from fat) for nutrients, and 12.6% (eggs) to 94.6% (Western fast foods) for food groups. Factor analysis identified five food patterns: vegetables and fruits, fried and fast foods, beverages, snacks and meats. Maternal education and family income were positively associated with higher heritabilities for intake of meat, fried, and fast food.Conclusions: Genetic influence on dietary intakes differed by gender, nutrients, food groups, and dietary patterns among Chinese twins. Parental SES characteristics modified the estimated genetic influence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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47. The 2016 Satellite Meeting of the International Society of Twin Studies: An Overview/Tribute to Irving I. Gottesman/Research: MZ Twinning After Single Embryo Transfer; Twin Study of Mononucleosis; Cerebral Injury After Twin-To-Twin Transfusion Syndrome Surgery/Human Interest: Sixteen Twin Pairs Born in a Single Hospital; Death of an Identical Twin Playwright; Twin Themes in Advertising; Conjoined Twins Separated in Saudi Arabia; Murder of One Twin By Her Co-Twin Disproved.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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TWIN studies , *EMBRYO transfer , *MONONUCLEOSIS , *FETOFETAL transfusion , *CARDIOVASCULAR system injuries , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *PROFESSIONAL associations , *TWINS , *CONJOINED twins - Abstract
The 2016 Satellite Meeting of the International Society of Twin Studies took place on June 20 in Brisbane, Australia. The host institution was the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute. An overview of selected presentations and activities is provided. This synopsis is followed by a brief tribute to the recent passing of our esteemed colleague, Dr Irving I. Gottesman. Next, there are summaries of research on monozygotic twinning after single embryo transfer, a twin study of mononucleosis susceptibility, cerebral injury following twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome surgery, and a correction and clarification regarding an article by Segal (2016) on the Brazilian Twin Registry. Human interest articles cover a hospital whose 2015 newborns included 16 pairs of twins born in 1 month, the death of an identical twin playwright, twin themes in advertising, conjoined twins separated in Saudi Arabia, and the dismissed charges of the murder of one twin by her co-twin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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48. Temporal and Spatial Variations in the Twinning Rate in Norway.
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Fellman, Johan
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TWIN studies , *POPULATION statistics , *SPATIAL variation , *REPRODUCTIVE technology , *REGRESSION analysis , *MULTIPLE pregnancy , *STATISTICS , *TWINS - Abstract
Strong geographical variations have been noted in the twinning rate (TWR). In general, the rate is high among people of African origin, intermediate among Europeans, and low among most Asiatic populations. In Europe, there tends to be a south–north cline, with a progressive increase in the TWR from south to north and a minimum around the Basque provinces. The highest TWRs in Europe have been found among the Nordic populations. Furthermore, within larger populations, small isolated subpopulations have been identified to have extreme, mainly high, TWRs. In the study of the temporal variation of the TWR in Norway, we consider the period from 1900 to 2014. The regional variation of the TWR in Norway is analyzed for the different counties for two periods, 1916–1926 and 1960–1988. Heterogeneity between the regional TWRs in Norway during 1916–1926 was found, but the goodness of fit for the alternative spatial models was only slight. The optimal regression model for the TWR in Norway has the longitude and its square as regressors. According to this model, the spatial variation is distributed in a west–east direction. For 1960–1988, no significant regional variation was observed. One may expect that the environmental and genetic differences between the counties in Norway have disappeared and that the regional TWRs have converged towards a common low level. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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49. Twin Research and the Arts: Interconnections / Twin Research: Twin Studies of Sexual Orientation; A Historical Biological Twin Gem; GWAS Approach to Who Has Twins / Newsworthy: Twins on College Campuses; 'Brainprint': Personal Identification by Brain Waves.
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Segal, Nancy L.
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TWINS , *SEXUAL orientation , *URINARY organ abnormalities , *CIRCUMCISION , *MULTIPLE birth , *FERTILITY , *TWIN studies - Abstract
The interrelatedness between twin research and the arts is explored via a new play about a famous case. In the 1960s, identical twin David Bruce Reimer was accidentally castrated as an infant during circumcision to correct a urinary problem. The decision to raise him as a girl, and the consequences of that decision, are explored in the new theatrical production of Boy. Other examples of the arts mirroring science, and vice versa, are described. Next, brief reviews and summaries of twin research on sexual orientation, 1860s’ knowledge of placental arrangements and twinning mechanisms, and genes underlying multiple birth conception and fertility related measures are provided. This article concludes with a look at twins on college campuses and the identification of individuals by their brain waves. A correction and clarification regarding my article on the Brazilian Twin Registry in the last issue of THG (Segal, 2016) is also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Variation and Heritability in Hair Diameter and Curvature in an Australian Twin Sample.
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Ho, Yvonne Y. W., Brims, Mark, McNevin, Dennis, Spector, Timothy D., Martin, Nicholas G., and Medland, Sarah E.
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TWIN studies , *HAIR physiology , *HERITABILITY , *HUMAN genetic variation , *FORENSIC genetics , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *HAIR , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SEX distribution , *TWINS , *WHITE people , *EVALUATION research , *ANATOMY - Abstract
Hair diameter and curvature are two characteristics of human scalp hair used in forensic contexts. While previous data show that subjective categorization of hair curvature is highly heritable, the heritability of objectively measured curvature and diameter, and variability of hair characteristics within each individual have not yet been studied. The present study measured hair diameter and curvature using an optical fiber diameter analyzer in a sample of 2,332 twins and siblings. Heritability was estimated using maximum likelihood structural equation modeling. Results show sex differences in the magnitude of genetic influence for mean diameter and curvature, with the vast majority of the variance accounted for by genetic effects in males (diameter = 86%, curvature = 53%) and females (diameter = 77%, curvature = 61%). The consistency of diameter (variance within an individual) was also highly heritable, but did not show sex limitation, with 68% of the variance accounted for by genetic factors. Moderate phenotypic correlations were seen between diameter and consistency (r = 0.3) but there was little correlation between diameter and curvature (r = -0.13). A bivariate Cholesky analysis was used to estimate the genetic and environmental correlations between hair diameter and consistency, yielding genetic correlations of r gF = 0.27 for females and r gM = 0.25 for males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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