Abstract

AbstractThe distribution of albumin variants amongst several Mexican Indian and non‐Indian (Mestizo) groups was studied. Of the former, a total of 1606 individuals belonging to 11 different tribes were examined with an overall frequency of 1.5% of Albumin Mexico fairly uniformly distributed in all four main linguistic groups. The 2548 Mestizos studied belong in six groups, two from Mexico City and four from elsewhere in the country. The first of the Mexico City groups consisted of 1313 individuals randomly chosen from the outpatient clinic of the Instituto Nacional de la Nutrición, while the rest included healthy individuals. The overall frequency was 1.9%, also fairly evenly distributed, with no difference between the hospital population and the others. No anomalous albumin, other than Albumin Mexico was encountered in the whole study. It is concluded that the similarity between Indians and Mestizos is due to the high Indian component of the latter and that the presence of albumin Mexico is a good anthropological marker for this region of the world.

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