A total of 162 Duchenne (DMD) patients and two girls with a DMD phenotype were analysed for deletions in the central region of the dystrophin gene in order to determine if there was a correlation between mental retardation (MR) and the pattern of deletion. Approximately 43% of the patients studied had deletions with two dystrophin cDNAs, cf23a and cf56a, and among 148 patients who were mentally assessed, 50% were mentally retarded. The average IQ in the group of patients with DNA deletions did not differ significantly from those patients with no detectable deletions. However, six unrelated DMD boys with MR showed an identical pattern of deletion. Our observations in the group of patients who had detected DNA deletions suggest that exon 52 of the dystrophin gene may be functionally significant in the manifestation of MR: 70% (19/27) of patients with a deletion of this exon were mentally retarded, whereas only 38% (15/39) of MR patients had deletions not involving exon 52. This difference was statistically significant.