ID# 1787:
C.B. Davenport response to D.P. Murphy, about a study of congenital "monsters" and using miscarriages as an estimate of embryonic lethals (1/15/1934)
Date:
1934
Pages: (1|2)
Source:
Cold Spring Harbor, ERO, Davenport, 1933-34

C.B. Davenport response to D.P. Murphy, about a study of congenital &quote;monsters&quote; and using miscarriages as an estimate of embryonic lethals (1/15/1934)

January 15, 1934. Dr. Douglas P. Murphy, University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Dear Dr. Murphy: Your letter of January 11th, telling of your plan of studying the mothers of monsters to find out if they tend to give rise to more than one received. So far as I know it, no study has been made on the whole field, although it is well known that several siblings of a large family may have the same gross defect. Some years ago we published in the EUGENICAL NEWS a photograph of a Brazilian family, nearly all the members of which had an extraordinary failure of development of the lower appendages. I will try to add a reference to it at the bottom of this letter. In making the study you propose I would suggest that it is very important to consider not only monsters born, but miscarriages of all sorts and, indeed, interval between normal births. The reason for this suggestion is that we now know (from studies of mice and other lower mammals) that only a certain proportion of offspring that start to develop are carried through the full term of gestation. Indeed, in our mouse colony we estimate, by comparing births with number of corpus luteum, that about 50% of the embryos of any litters are resorbed in the early or middle part of gestation. It seems probable that these deaths are those of individuals who have received from one or both parents a lethal factor which makes normal development impossible. Of such lethal factors there are all grades, and some permit the development of the embryo to the end of gestation, though with a gross defect. Many miscarriages are due to deaths from lethal factors carried by the gametes, and it is probable that very many intrauterine deaths occur in the first two or three months which are not recognized as miscarriages, and which are due to such germ defects. That is the reason for considering the interval between births. [end]

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