Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., V5A 1S6, Canada.
Forensic Sci Int. 2010 Sep 10;201(1-3):22-6. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2010.03.012. Epub 2010 Apr 1.
With the exception of exhumations of mass graves in Latin America, forensic dentists and odontologists are rarely involved in the examination of mortal remains recovered from mass graves. The cited reason is often that "there are no dental records-so what is the point"? In this presentation we review the published accounts of examination of remains arising from the conflict in the former Yugoslavia between 1991 and 1999 in which dental examinations are reported. There are roughly 30,000 missing persons of which more than 15,000 mortal remains have been identified, mostly based on DNA. There are 9 sources which describe postmortem dental examinations of 3919 sets of remains; of these, 23% were purported to have been identified specifically from dental information. Of the 8100 listed missing persons from the Srebrenica mass killings in 1995, we located 600 dental records. A sample of 263 charts was examined for information about first molar treatment as we are concerned that dental charting of individuals who lose their first molars may be incorrectly done if allowance is not made for mesial drift of the remaining molars. We found that of all the first molar extractions that are ever going to occur according to these dental charts, 63% have taken place by age 18. The majority of extracted first molars have a functional age of 17 years. We observe that an adult's remains from Srebrenica usually have only second and third molars, which have often drifted forward to occupy the position of the first molar creating the appearance of third molar agenesis. We conclude: that, since dental identifications of victims in mass graves and mass disasters is the exception rather than the rule, even in the absence of DNA-based identifications, international forensic odontologists have an ethical obligation to become more involved in examination of mass grave victims, that there must be more determined searches for antemortem dental records; that local dentists should be approached to participate in the examination of remains and lastly that dental examination and charting by anthropologists and pathologists may be grossly inaccurate. Furthermore, even in the absence of dental records, there is significant information about the individual to be obtained by an oral biologist since many families have useful memories about the oral status of their loved ones who went missing.
除了在拉丁美洲挖掘万人冢之外,法医学牙医和口腔学家很少参与从万人冢中挖掘出的尸体的检查。引用的原因通常是“没有牙齿记录——那有什么意义呢”?在本次演讲中,我们回顾了 1991 年至 1999 年期间在前南斯拉夫冲突中检查遗体的已发表报告,其中报告了口腔检查。大约有 30000 人失踪,其中超过 15000 人的遗体已经得到确认,主要是基于 DNA。有 9 个来源描述了对 3919 组遗体的死后牙科检查;其中,23%的遗体据称是根据牙齿信息专门识别的。在 1995 年斯雷布雷尼察大屠杀的 8100 名失踪人员中,我们找到了 600 份牙科记录。我们检查了 263 份图表的样本,以获取关于第一磨牙治疗的信息,因为我们担心,如果不考虑剩余磨牙的近中漂移,对失去第一磨牙的个人的牙齿图表记录可能会做得不正确。我们发现,根据这些牙科图表,所有第一磨牙拔牙中,有 63%发生在 18 岁之前。大多数被拔掉的第一磨牙的功能年龄为 17 岁。我们观察到,斯雷布雷尼察的成年人遗体通常只有第二和第三磨牙,这些磨牙经常向前漂移以占据第一磨牙的位置,从而产生第三磨牙缺失的外观。我们的结论是:由于在万人冢和大规模灾难中对受害者进行的牙齿识别是例外而不是常规做法,即使没有基于 DNA 的识别,国际法医口腔学家也有义务更多地参与万人冢受害者的检查,必须更坚定地寻找事先的牙科记录;应该联系当地牙医参与遗体检查;最后,人类学家和病理学家的牙齿检查和图表记录可能非常不准确。此外,即使没有牙齿记录,口腔生物学家也可以通过口腔状况获得有关个人的重要信息,因为许多家庭对失踪亲人的口腔状况有有用的记忆。