BIOLOGICAL FACTORS IN MILD MENTAL RETARDATION

Abstract
A group of 434 children with non-syndromic mental retardation was analyzed for frequency of recorded prenatal, perinatal and infantile biological disturbances. Mildly retarded individuals of unrelated parentage, both idiopathic and familial, had a strikingly higher prevalence of recorded disturbances than did a control group of retarded individuals with consanguineous parents and of probable genetic etiology. These disturbances were as frequent among those with mild retardation as among parallel groups with severe retardation. The most significant single disturbance among the mildly retarded was a history of maternal reproductive inefficiency. These findings conflict with the view that mild retardation is predominantly cultural-familial and is not pathological in nature.