Clubbed fingers: the claws we lost?

Clubbed digits resemble the human embryonic fingers and toes, which look like the digits of a claw. Clubbed digits, thus, may represent the return of the embryonic claw and may even represent the claws man has lost during evolution, if ontogenesis really recapitulates phylogenesis. We put forward th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical hypotheses 2004-01, Vol.62 (3), p.321-324
Hauptverfasser: Brouwers, A.A.M, Vermeij-Keers, C, van Zoelen, E.J, Gooren, L.J.G
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container_end_page 324
container_issue 3
container_start_page 321
container_title Medical hypotheses
container_volume 62
creator Brouwers, A.A.M
Vermeij-Keers, C
van Zoelen, E.J
Gooren, L.J.G
description Clubbed digits resemble the human embryonic fingers and toes, which look like the digits of a claw. Clubbed digits, thus, may represent the return of the embryonic claw and may even represent the claws man has lost during evolution, if ontogenesis really recapitulates phylogenesis. We put forward the hypothesis that secondary clubbing, like gynecomastia, is caused by a pathologic condition, which alters hormone levels in the blood, leading to the activation of ‘dormant’ genes, resulting in the development of an organ. However, the nature of the diseases that cause clubbing suggests that these hormones may actually be cytokines, acting as hormones. The nature of these cytokines is not known. They may be identified by comparing their blood levels or the combination of their blood levels to the presence or absence of clubbing, but also to the degree of clubbing and its disappearance after treatment of the primary disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0306-9877(03)00300-1
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Animals
Atavism
Biological Evolution
Clubbing
Cytokines
Cytokines - blood
Estrogens - blood
Gynecomastia - metabolism
Hoof and Claw
Humans
Male
Osteoarthropathy, Secondary Hypertrophic - etiology
Osteoarthropathy, Secondary Hypertrophic - genetics
Osteoarthropathy, Secondary Hypertrophic - physiopathology
title Clubbed fingers: the claws we lost?
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