Worldwide distribution of NAT2 acetylation phenotypes in healthy individuals. Each pie represents the population proportion of fast and slow acetylators. Populations numbered from 1 to 13 were analyzed in this study: (1) Bakola Pygmies, (2) Baka Pygmies, (3) Ateke Bantus, (4) Somali, (5) Morrocans, (6) Ashkenazi Jews, (7) Sardinians, (8) Swedes, (9) Saami, (10) Turkmen, (11) Gujarati, (12) Thai, and (13) Chinese. Numbers 14 to 36 refer to a reviewed population: (14) Yorubas (Jeyakumar and French 1981), (15) Zimbabweans (Nhachi 1988), (16) South Africans (Hodgkin et al. 1979), (17) Libyans (Karim et al. 1981), (18) Saudi Arabians (El-Yazigi et al. 1992), (19) Emiratis (Woolhouse et al. 1997), (20) Iranians (Sardas et al. 1993), (21) Jordanians (Irshaid et al. 1992), (22) Turkmen (Bozkurt et al. 1990), (23) Greeks (Asprodini et al. 1998), (24) Germans (Cascorbi et al. 1995), (25) Russians (Lil’in et al. 1984), (26) Pakistanis (Saleem et al. 1989), (27) Bangladeshi (Zaid et al. 2004), (28) Thai (Kukongviriyapan et al. 1984), (29) Malaysians (Ong et al. 1990), (30) Chinese (Zhao et al. 2000), (31) Koreans (Lee et al. 2002), (32) Japanese (Hashiguchi and Ebihara 1992), (33) Papua New Guineans (Hombhanje 1990), (34) Australian Aborigines (Ilett et al. 1993), (35) Eskimos (Eidus et al. 1974), and (36) Amerindians (Jorge-Nebert et al. 2002).