Dental School, Department of Orthodontics, Federal University of Pará, Belém, Pará, Brazil.
Dental School, Department of Orthodontics, State University of Rio de Janeiro-UERJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2020 Apr 21;15(4):e0230809. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0230809. eCollection 2020.
Riverine populations are typical of the Amazon region that depend on nature for subsistence. These people are considered an intermediate population between the urban and indigenous, the original Amazon habitants. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to evaluate the relationship between tooth wear and age in a remote riverine population from the Amazon, located by the Tucumanduba River (n = 94), and to compare them to previous findings obtained from semi-isolated indigenous (n = 223) and urban populations (n = 40) from the Amazon region, which were examined using the same methodology. Using linear regression, tooth wear explained 54.5% of the variation in the ages of the riverine subjects (p<0.001). This coefficient is mid-way between those obtained in semi-isolated indigenous populations (65-86%) and urban subjects (12%) living in the Amazon. Our findings suggest that tooth wear, a direct evidence of what an individual ate in the past, may be an indicator of the acculturation process in remote populations.
河流人口是亚马逊地区的典型代表,他们依靠自然为生。这些人被认为是城市和土著之间的中间人口,是亚马逊地区的原始居民。本横断面研究的目的是评估亚马逊地区图库曼达巴河(Tucumanduba River)上一个偏远河流人口的牙齿磨损与年龄之间的关系(n = 94),并将其与之前使用相同方法从半隔离的土著(n = 223)和城市(n = 40)人口中获得的发现进行比较。使用线性回归,牙齿磨损解释了河流人群年龄变化的 54.5%(p<0.001)。这个系数介于半隔离的土著人群(65-86%)和居住在亚马逊的城市人群(12%)之间。我们的研究结果表明,牙齿磨损,即个体过去饮食的直接证据,可能是偏远人群文化适应过程的一个指标。