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Multivariate analysis of dermatoglyphics of severe mental retardates: an application of the constellation graphical method for discriminant analysis.

Abstract

We studied the dermatoglyphics of 353 severe mental retardates (excluding those with chromosomal abnormalities and major limb malformations), using multivariate analysis, to determine how early intrauterine factors are related to the etiology of mental retardation. First, dermatoglyphics were compared between 140 individuals with undefined prenatal factors and 700 normal controls. After 6 and 9 dermatoglyphic traits were chosen as discriminative variables for males and females, respectively, the data were subjected separately for each sex to the constellation graphical method for discriminant analysis. The same formula as obtained in the idiopathic group was subsequently applied to data from cases in other etiological categories. When the misclassification rate was 0.03, the rates of correct classification of the male patients into the etiological categories of undefined prenatal, defined prenatal, perinatal, postnatal and unknown (no anamnestic data available) categories were 19.7% (13/66), 20.0% (3/15), 8.8% (5/57), 5.0% (1/20) and 7.7% (2/26), while the correct classification rates of females were 24.3% (18/74), 42.1% (8/19), 18.9% (7/37), 5.1% (1/16) and 13.0% (3/23), respectively. The results suggest that early intrauterine factors such as those producing dermatoglyphic deviations may contribute to the pathogenesis of severe mental retardation not only in patients with undefined prenatal etiological factors but also in those with perinatal factors, especially those of the female sex.</p

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