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Clinical aspects of multiple pregnancy
- Publication date
- 25 September 1996
- Publisher
- The natural wonder of multiple pregnancy and birth has fascinated mankind
since ancient times and twins figure prominently in legends, folktales and myths.
One of the best known traditional stories is that of Romulus and Remus, the twins
who were abandoned on the banks of the Tiber and suckled by a she-wolf. Later
Romulus founded Rome, the city that still bears his name, after killing his twinbrother.
Tales of profound attachment of co-twins, such as Castor and Pollux, as
well as those of murderous jealousy, such as between Jacob and Esau, illustrate an
early intuitive recognition of the fact that even identical twins have their own
personality. A century ago this particular aspect of twinning made Francis Galton
realize that twins could also serve as tools for scientific research into the old
question of nurture versus nature. His publication "The history of twins, as a
criterion of the relative powers of nature and nurture" that appeared in 1875 set the
basis for the development of what is now known as the "twin method" in scientific
research". The twin method in its simplest form is based on the assumption that the
extent to which any given morphologic, biochemical, functional, or behavioral trait
or condition exhibits a higher average within-pair similarity in monozygotic than in
dizygotic co-twins is a reflection of the extent to which that particular variable is
under genetic control'oo.
The cause of multiple pregnancy and its clinical hazards have been subject of
medical investigation since Hippocrates' time.