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A genetic analysis of relative weight among 4,020 twin pairs, with an emphasis on sex effects.
39
Citations
13
References
1994
Year
GeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyAnthropometric IndicatorSex EffectsObesityMetabolic SyndromeBody CompositionHuman VariationBody Mass IndexSex DifferencesPublic HealthHeritabilityHigh HeritabilityTwin PairsMedicineStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationSex DifferenceRelative WeightEvolutionary BiologyBody ImageLinkage Analysis
This study replicated previous findings showing a high heritability of obesity, as measured by body mass index (kg/m2), using a measure of relative weight that does not assume a constant regression of height on weight across different populations, and evaluated whether there are sex-limited genetic effects. Subjects were 4,020 adult twin pairs. Alternative causal structural equation models were fitted to variance-covariance matrices. The ADE model (additive genetic effects, dominant/nonadditive genetic effects, and unique environment) fit best. Allowing for sex-specific effects (common sex-limitation model) significantly improved the fit, X2(6) = 230.5, p < .001. The heritability of that portion of weight unrelated to height was large: .61 for men and .73 for women.
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