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ARTICLE |

AN APPEAL FOR EMBRYOS AND FETUSES

William W. Graves, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;73(23):1788-1789. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610490052030.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —In 1906 I observed certain malformations of the human shoulder blade, and have given them the collective name "the scaphoid type of scapula," and suggested some of its possible bearings in general and special pathology. Personal observations and those of others have associated this form of scapula with problems intimately connected with those of heredity, longevity and racial morbidity. Notwithstanding the many studies which have been made on the scaphoid type of scapula, all of these must be considered preliminary to those which must follow before we shall be in a position to draw far-reaching conclusions, if any, in reference to the significance of this and associated anomalies.Probably the most suggestive observation connected with the scaphoid type of scapula in man is its age incidence; that is to say, it occurs with great frequency among the young and with decreasing frequency in each succeeding decennium of

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