BBC NEWS Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific Arabic Spanish Russian Chinese Welsh
BBCi CATEGORIES   TV   RADIO   COMMUNICATE   WHERE I LIVE   INDEX    SEARCH 

BBC NEWS
 You are in: UK: England
Front Page 
World 
UK 
England 
Northern Ireland 
Scotland 
Wales 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 


Commonwealth Games 2002

BBC Sport

BBC Weather

SERVICES 
Monday, 10 December, 2001, 23:50 GMT
Palm patterns and diabetes 'linked'
Insulin
Type 1 Diabetes affects more than 300,000 Britons
Scientists in Manchester say they have found that lines on the hand - dermatoglyphics -could predict a newborn baby's likelihood of developing diabetes as a teenager.

Researchers at Manchester University's Institute of Science and Technology (Umist) studied computer analyses of the hands of 50 young children.

They concentrated on the line on the palm that sweeps down around the thumb to the wrist.

Prints were taken of the children's palms at the age of six years and those children were again examined upon reaching 18.


This work does not require hospital or medical facilities: just an ink pad and a magnifying glass

Professor Bernard Richards
In those with diabetes, the line joined a second line at a wider angle and at a point 1cm higher in the palm.

Early indications of the possible onset of diabetes give parents and clinicians adequate opportunity to come to terms with the condition.

Bernard Richards, Professor of Medical Informatics at Umist, led the team of researchers.

He said: "The relevance of this work to society is that such studies can be carried out in the poorer countries and in remote communities, such as in desert lands and in the bush.

"This work does not require hospital or medical facilities: just an ink pad and a magnifying glass."

The discovery is among a number of studies that have increasingly shown how dermatoglyphics can predict a range of conditions and diseases.

Scientists have found clues to the development of heart disease, autism, anxiety, schizophrenia and even cot death.

Dermatoglyphics develop at specific times in the foetus at the same time that critical growth in the brain is taking place.


Click here to go to Manchester
See also:

27 Nov 01 | Health
Diabetes heart death warning
10 Jun 01 | Health
Diabetes deaths 'unnecessary'
03 Jan 01 | Health
Diabetes gene identified
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more England stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more England stories