Birth Stress, Autoimmune Diseases, and Handedness

Abstract
A large nonclinical sample of left-handed and right-handed subjects completed laterality and medical health questionnaires. The group of left-handed subjects showed a raised incidence of birth complications and learning disorders whereas no differences were found for birth order and maternal age. Left-handed and right-handed subjects showed similar incidences of autoimmune diseases, allergies, migraine, and stuttering. These results suggest that an association between early pathology and left-handedness may be found in a subset of the nonclinical left-handed population. The underlying pathological influence seems to manifest itself in pregnancy and birth complications rather than in immune disorders.