Okazaki Kenji, Takamuku Hirofumi, Yonemoto Shiori, Itahashi Yu, Gakuhari Takashi, Yoneda Minoru, Chen Jie
Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Japan.
Doigahama Site Anthropological Museum, Japan.
Int J Paleopathol. 2019 Mar;24:236-244. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2019.01.002. Epub 2019 Jan 16.
The earliest evidence of human tuberculosis can be traced to at least the early dynastic periods, when full-scaled wet-rice agriculture began or entered its early developmental stages, in circum-China countries (Japan, Korea, and Thailand). Early studies indicated that the initial spread of tuberculosis coincided with the development of wet-rice agriculture. It has been proposed that the adaptation to agriculture changed human social/living environments, coincidentally favoring survival and spread of pathogenic Mycobacterial strains that cause tuberculosis. Here we present a possible case of spinal tuberculosis evident in the remains of a young female (M191) found among 184 skeletal individuals who were Neolithic wet-rice agriculturalists from the Yangtze River Delta of China, associated with Songze culture (3900-3200 B.C.). This early evidence of tuberculosis in East Asia serves as an example of early human morbidity following the adoption of the wet-rice agriculture.
人类结核病的最早证据至少可以追溯到王朝早期,当时环中国国家(日本、韩国和泰国)开始了全面的水稻种植农业或进入其早期发展阶段。早期研究表明,结核病的最初传播与水稻种植农业的发展相吻合。有人提出,对农业的适应改变了人类的社会/生活环境,巧合地有利于导致结核病的致病性分枝杆菌菌株的生存和传播。在这里,我们展示了一个可能的脊椎结核病例,该病例在184具骨骼个体中发现的一名年轻女性(M191)的遗骸中很明显,这些个体是来自中国长江三角洲的新石器时代水稻种植农民,与崧泽文化(公元前3900 - 3200年)有关。东亚地区结核病的这一早期证据是采用水稻种植农业后早期人类发病的一个例子。