Scientists have studied Hitler's DNA and revealed the secret of his problems with women
A scientist from the University of Potsdam in Germany, Alex Key, revealed in a new documentary on British Channel4 "Hitler's DNA: The Dictator's Plan," that the analysis of Adolf Hitler's DNA has provided answers to numerous questions about problems in his sexual life.
This is reported by BAKU.WS with reference to aif.ru.
According to the expert, the dictator was found to have a gene that causes genital deformities and mental health problems; carriers of this gene often suffer from schizophrenia and ADHD.
"No one has ever been able to explain why Hitler felt so uncomfortable around women throughout his life, or why he probably never engaged in intimate relationships with women. But now we know that he had Kallmann syndrome, this may be the answer we have been looking for a long time," Key said.
This also explains why Hitler did not have children with his companion Eva Braun, the expert emphasized.
"10% of people with this type of mutation can have a small penis - a 'micropenis'. A much more common feature is that the testicles typically do not descend to the scrotum," explained Jorma Toppari, a professor of medicine from the University of Turku in Finland.
It is known that the dictator's body was destroyed after his death. However, scientists were able to study his genes thanks to American soldier Roswell Rosengren, who unwittingly preserved Hitler's DNA by cutting out a piece of blood-stained fabric from his couch as a memento.
Scientists from Aarhus University in Denmark compared the blood with the DNA of the dictator's relatives and confirmed that it belonged to Hitler.
The analysis also revealed that the dictator was among the 1% of people on the planet predisposed to autism and bipolar disorder. His second cousin, Aloisia Veit, spent years in a psychiatric hospital in Vienna.
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