“…Some patterns are distinctive in their association more commonly with a single chromosome than in normal controls; for example, the arch fibular or arch fibular-S pattern on the hallucal area of the foot associated with D1 trisomy (Uchida, Patau, and Smith, 1962) and the arch tibial associated with Gtrisomy (Cummins, 1939;Walker, 1958). For the most part, however, an increase of some pattern frequencies is more commonly associated with more than a single chromosome and has been observed in apparently euploid but clinically abnormal conditions such as the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (Giroux and Miller, 1967;Padfield, Partington, and Simpson, 1968). A large atd angle is most often found in aneuploid conditions involving the 17-18 or 21-22 chromosomes, in XO individuals, and in persons with a deleted 4-5 chromosome (cri-du-chat syndrome) (Alter, 1966).…”