2019
DOI: 10.5958/0974-0848.2019.00027.7
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Study of fingerprints in relation to gender and blood group among medical students in Kerala region

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The incidence of whorls in our study was highest in blood group B and lowest in blood group AB. This is in agreement with the studies of Deopa, et al 24 Fig. 1: Gender distribution of the study population The incidence of both loops and whorls is more in Rh positive individuals, which is as per the findings of Bharadwaja, et al 7 and Mehta and Mehta.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…The incidence of whorls in our study was highest in blood group B and lowest in blood group AB. This is in agreement with the studies of Deopa, et al 24 Fig. 1: Gender distribution of the study population The incidence of both loops and whorls is more in Rh positive individuals, which is as per the findings of Bharadwaja, et al 7 and Mehta and Mehta.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The incidence of loops was highest in blood group B, followed by blood groups O, A and AB. This correlates with the study of Deopa, et al 24 which also found the highest incidence of loops in blood group B. However, studies of Mehta and Mehta, 8 Sudhikshya, et al 19 and Vinay and Gowri 25 found the highest incidence of loops in blood group O and the lowest incidence in blood groups A and B and studies of Shashikala and Aswini 26 proved the highest rate of incidence in AB.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Focusing the discussion on gender difference in finger prints, our study was comparable to study done by Rastogi P et al 13 done on medical students of Mangalore, showing dominance of loops in females and whorls in males and by Karki RK et al 15 done on students of Kathmandu, while it differs from the study done by Sam NM et al 14 done on South Indians, which shows loops predominance in both the sexes. Female showed arch pattern more than male which was comparable to a study done by Deopa D et al 16 on medical students of Uttarakhand.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…also observed the same patterns Ranjan et al (2015) 23. conducted a study, similar to the present study, and noticed loops in majority of cases (52.2%), followed by whorls in 37.45 cases and arches in 10.4% cases.Singh S et al (2018)10 ,Patil A et al (2017)13 , Butt MK et al (2017)24 , Salmani D et al (2016)22 , Shrestha DB et al (2016)9 , Narayana BL et al (2016)18 , Shukla S et al (2016)17 , Mehta et al (2015)8 andDeopa D et al (2014) …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%