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ARTICLE |

CONGENITAL DEFORMITIES OF THE HANDS.

FRANCIS R. SHERWOOD, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(10):515-520. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450370001001.
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Anomalies of the hand are not an infrequent occurrence. The variety of the deviations from the normal are very great, from that of a double hand, as reported by Geraldes and others, or one with supernumerary digits, or cleft hand, as operated on and reported by C. N. Dowd, 1 or with suppression of digits, and so on down to congenital absence of hand. Perhaps the most frequent congenital deformity of the hand is that of supernumerary digits. The writer attended school with a family in which there were supernumerary digits of the hands and feet in both males and females in two generations. Some of the children were normal. The father of one of the families had a cleft palate without any deformity of the hands. These cases have never been recorded. Those who possess the deformities, as well as the parents, are always more or less sensitive about

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