Tayles N, Buckley H R
Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology, Otago School of Medical Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2004 Nov;125(3):239-56. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.10378.
The recent excavation of a sample of 120 human skeletons from an Iron Age site in the valley of the Mun River, a tributary of the Mekong River on the Khorat Plateau in northeast Thailand, has provided the largest sample from this period in the region to date. This paper reviews three individuals from the sample with pathological changes for which the differential diagnosis includes systemic infectious disease. In two of these, both males with lesions of the hands and feet, leprosy and psoriatic arthritis are discussed as differential diagnoses, with leprosy the most probable. In the third, a female with lesions of the spine, the differential diagnosis includes tuberculosis and nonspecific osteomyelitis. Tuberculosis is the most probable diagnosis. Although the focus of this paper is a presentation of the evidence for infectious disease at Noen U-Loke, the significance of probable diagnoses of mycobacterial diseases for the history of the diseases and for prehistory in mainland Southeast Asia is also briefly discussed.
最近,在泰国东北部呵叻高原湄公河的一条支流蒙河河谷的一个铁器时代遗址,发掘出了120具人类骨骼样本,这是该地区迄今为止这一时期最大的样本。本文回顾了该样本中三名有病理变化的个体,其鉴别诊断包括系统性传染病。其中两名男性手脚有病变,讨论了麻风病和银屑病关节炎作为鉴别诊断,麻风病是最有可能的诊断。第三名是一名脊柱有病变的女性,鉴别诊断包括结核病和非特异性骨髓炎。结核病是最有可能的诊断。虽然本文的重点是展示诺恩乌洛克存在传染病的证据,但也简要讨论了分枝杆菌病的可能诊断对该疾病历史以及东南亚大陆史前史的意义。