Biological Explanations for Schizophrenia
Ever wondered why schizophrenia runs in families but doesn't guarantee that children will develop it? The answer lies in a fascinating mix of genetic factors and brain chemistry that psychology researchers have been piecing together for decades.
Family and adoption studies provide compelling evidence for genetic influence. Gottesman's large-scale research found that identical twins have a 48% risk of both developing schizophrenia, compared to just 6% for parents and children. Hilker's more recent study showed concordance rates of 33% for identical twins versus 7% for non-identical twins, clearly demonstrating genetic similarity matters.
What makes this even more interesting is that schizophrenia is polygenic - meaning multiple genes are involved rather than just one "schizophrenia gene." Ripke's massive study comparing 37,000 people with schizophrenia to 113,000 controls identified 108 genetic variants associated with increased risk. These candidate genes primarily affect neurotransmitter production, especially dopamine.
Key insight: Genetics load the gun, but environment pulls the trigger - having genetic risk doesn't guarantee you'll develop schizophrenia.
The role of mutation adds another layer of complexity. Parental age significantly affects risk due to increased DNA mutations - fathers under 25 show 0.7% risk compared to 2% for fathers over 50. This explains why schizophrenia can appear even without family history, often triggered by radiation, toxins, or viral infections affecting parental DNA.