English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm doing a project for psychology. I know the chances of a person going crazy is greater if it runs in (one side of) the family, but how much greater?

Please put this in the context of having a perfectly normal lineage on one side of the family and a history of mental illness for the other.

2007-02-28 17:13:57 · 8 answers · asked by RandomQuestions.. 2 in Health Mental Health

The illness that i'm researching is Paranoid Personality Disorder (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paranoid_personality_disorder)

2007-02-28 17:20:04 · update #1

8 answers

It depends on the illness.... Some illnesses have no gnetic links that we have found like Schizofrenia. And some have very strong genetic links, like bipolar, in which 60% of case have genetic markers.


Paranoid Personality Disorder is within the Schizophrenia spectrum. I dont know that you will be able to find much CONCLUSIVE evidence saying that it is genetic, but I know they are currently researching just that. Unfortunatley, we dont know much about the reasons for the onset of schizophrenia yet.

2007-02-28 17:18:58 · answer #1 · answered by handofachlys 2 · 1 0

I even have had categories on psychological ailment for years. I even have the valuable variety of schitozophrenia (my brother has the unfavorable sort) i think of I even have bi polar besides. did no longer recoginise it till some weeks in the past. Had it final night and this morning. puffed up like a delicate. It went mid morning. I went flat and then a million/2 an hour later the schitophrenia kicked in. do no longer thoughts the mania nevertheless. could desire to confirm somebody the following day. Spose i'm going to could desire to get greater drugs and then my manias will bypass, regrettably. had to tell me pal at my interest that i replaced into ill and he or she had to be greater sympathetic, basically fell in love back approximately ten minutes in the past. (somebody I variety of be responsive to) Like this as my eyes eliminate darkness from greater. She is an extremely expert variety of guy or woman which i'm no longer used to . around my age yet so mature, very beautiful i could desire to assert.

2016-09-30 01:16:01 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I can only speak from personal experience and , yes , it really does contribute a great deal to the predisposition to having a mental illness. My brother is in a mental hospital readjusting his meds, I am a mental patient, my daughter is in the care of a psychiatrist. On the maternal side of my family there is suicide and mental illness all down the line.

2007-02-28 17:19:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I think it depends on the mental illness, but I thought that if you have a parent with a type of mental illness that, that doubles your chances of having it as well.

2007-02-28 17:18:00 · answer #4 · answered by Stephanie 4 · 0 0

Have you tried looking at old records from state mental hospitals? They usually included family history and many of them had history of illness.

2007-02-28 17:24:04 · answer #5 · answered by columind99 6 · 0 0

hullo
the use of the word crazy is unethical.
paranoid personality disorder have a weak genetic bases just like other personality disorders,you should read a textbook on this topic like the comprehensive textbook of psychiatry by CAPLAN AND SADDOK.

Dr solo

2007-02-28 17:34:26 · answer #6 · answered by baghdadcatcash 4 · 1 0

It depends on the particular mental illness in question... you can't generalize heritability of mental illness in general.

2007-02-28 17:19:04 · answer #7 · answered by Radon 2 · 1 0

if you are predisposed to an illness, it would take a tramatic event in order for you to have it. For expamle, my friend was predisposed to aspergers syndrome, he was normal until he was about 9. The mentaly traumatic event of his parents divorce triggered his aspergers syndrome to come in.

2007-02-28 17:24:26 · answer #8 · answered by animespaz 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers