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Birth Defects
Home > Research >
Key Findings > Left and Right Sides of
the Body Are Differentially Susceptible to Birth Defects |
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Left and Right Sides of the Body Are
Differentially Susceptible to Birth Defects
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CDC scientists analyzed right vs. left
side distribution of external birth defects and found that some types of
defects occur more often on one side of the body than the other.
The records of 6,390 metropolitan Atlanta
children with external unilateral birth defects were examined to
determine whether defects occur more often on one side of the body than
on the other.
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Fifty-seven (56%) of the 102 defect
types studied had a right-sided excess, 39 (38%) had a left-sided
excess, and 6 (6%) were equally distributed.
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Among the 102 defect types, the
percentage of children who had right-sided defects was correlated
with the percentage of children who were male.
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Some genes are differentially
expressed on the right and left sides of the developing embryo.
Differential left-right expression of genes during development may
cause right vs. left sided differences in cell proliferation,
morphogenetic movement, cell-to-cell communication, or other
morphogenetic processes that could influence the susceptibility of
specific bilateral structures to birth defects.
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Some evidence suggests that genes
related to right vs. left side of the body may be located on the sex
chromosomes. This may explain the correlation observed between sex
and right vs. left side defects.
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Differences in the right vs. left
side distribution of birth defects and the association with sex of
the infant may provide important clues about the origins of specific
birth defects.
Results published in: Teratology
1999;60:265-271. (Abstract)
Date:
June 17, 2005
Content source: National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental
Disabilities
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