Crittenden Alyssa N, Sorrentino John, Moonie Sheniz A, Peterson Mika, Mabulla Audax, Ungar Peter S
Metabolism, Anthropometry, and Nutrition Laboratory, Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States of America.
D.M.D. Family and Cosmetic Dentistry, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Mar 15;12(3):e0172197. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172197. eCollection 2017.
Conventional wisdom holds that a decline in oral health accompanies the transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture, given increased consumption of carbohydrates. This widely touted example of the mismatch between our biology and modern lifestyle has been intuited largely from the bioarchaeological record of the Neolithic Revolution in the New World. Recent studies of other populations have, however, challenged the universality of this assertion. Here, we present the first comprehensive study of oral health among a living population in transition from the bush to village life, the Hadza hunter-gatherers of Tanzania, to test the hypothesis that the shift from foraging to farming, or agricultural intensification, inevitably leads to increased periodontal disease, caries, and orthodontic disorders. Our results showed that women living in villages consuming a mostly agricultural diet exhibited more caries and periodontal disease than those living in the bush consuming a mostly wild-food diet. Furthermore, men living in the bush consuming mostly a wild-food diet had more than those living in the village consuming a mostly agricultural diet. These findings are explained by the high incidence of maize consumption in village settings, along with previously recognized variation in rate of caries between men and women. The unexpected discovery of high caries incidences for men in the bush is likely explained by heavy reliance on honey, and perhaps differential access to tobacco and marijuana. These data support the notions that mechanisms of cariogenesis are multifactorial and that the relationships between oral health and the shift from a predominantly wild-food diet to one dominated by cultigens are nuanced.
传统观点认为,随着碳水化合物摄入量的增加,从狩猎采集生活方式向农业生活方式的转变会伴随着口腔健康的下降。这个被广泛宣扬的体现我们的生理机能与现代生活方式不匹配的例子,很大程度上是从新世界新石器革命的生物考古记录中推断出来的。然而,最近对其他人群的研究对这一论断的普遍性提出了质疑。在此,我们首次对坦桑尼亚哈扎族狩猎采集者这一正从丛林生活向乡村生活转变的现存人群的口腔健康进行了全面研究,以检验从觅食向农耕的转变或农业集约化必然会导致牙周病、龋齿和正畸疾病增加这一假设。我们的研究结果表明,与食用主要为野生食物的丛林居民相比,食用主要为农业饮食的乡村女性患龋齿和牙周病的情况更多。此外,食用主要为野生食物的丛林男性比食用主要为农业饮食的乡村男性患龋齿的情况更多。这些发现可以通过乡村环境中玉米消费的高发生率以及之前所认识到的男女之间龋齿发生率的差异来解释。丛林中男性龋齿发生率高这一意外发现,可能是由于对蜂蜜的严重依赖,或许还有获取烟草和大麻的差异所致。这些数据支持了龋齿发生机制是多因素的观点,以及口腔健康与从主要以野生食物为主的饮食向以栽培作物为主的饮食转变之间的关系是微妙的这一观点。