Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Anthropology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2021 Apr;174(4):812-821. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24248. Epub 2021 Feb 13.
Skeletal variation in cortical bone thickness is an indicator of bone quality and health in archeological populations. Second metacarpal radiogrammetry, which measures cortical thickness at the shaft midpoint, is traditionally used to evaluate bone loss in bioarcheological and some clinical contexts. However fragmentary elements are regularly omitted because the midpoint cannot be determined. This methodological limitation reduces sample sizes and biases them against individuals prone to fracture, such as older individuals with low bone mass. This study introduces a new technique for measuring cortical bone in second metacarpals, the "Region of Interest" (ROI) method, which quantifies bone in archeological remains with less-than-ideal preservation while accounting for cortical heterogeneity.
The ROI method was adapted from digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR), a clinical method used to estimate bone mineral density, and tested using second metacarpals from Middenbeemster, Netherlands, a 19th century known age and sex skeletal collection. The ROI method quantifies cortical bone area within a 1.9 cm-long, mid-diaphyseal region, standardized for body size differences using total area (CAI ). CAI values were compared to traditional radiogrammetric cortical indices (CI) to assess the method's ability to identify age-related bone loss.
CAI values have high intra- and interobserver replicability and are strongly and significantly correlated with CI values for both males (r[n = 39] = 0.906, p = 0.000) and females (r[n = 58] = 0.925, p = 0.000).
The ROI method complements traditional radiogrammetry analyses and provides a reliable way to quantify cortical bone in incomplete second metacarpals, thereby maximizing sample sizes, allowing patterns in bone acquisition and loss to be more comprehensively depicted in archeological assemblages.
皮质骨厚度的骨骼变异是考古人群骨量和健康的指标。第二掌骨干骺端放射测量术,测量骨干中点处皮质厚度,传统上用于评估生物考古学和一些临床环境中的骨丢失。然而,由于无法确定中点,经常会省略片段性元素。这种方法学上的局限性减少了样本量,并使那些容易骨折的人(如骨量低的老年人)产生偏见。本研究介绍了一种测量第二掌骨皮质骨的新技术,即“感兴趣区域”(ROI)方法,该方法在考虑皮质异质性的同时,对保存效果不理想的考古遗骸进行定量骨量分析。
ROI 方法是从数字 X 射线放射测量术(DXR)改编而来的,DXR 是一种用于估计骨矿物质密度的临床方法,并使用来自荷兰米登贝克的第二掌骨进行了测试,这是一个 19 世纪已知年龄和性别的骨骼收藏。ROI 方法在 1.9 厘米长的骨干中部区域内量化皮质骨面积,通过总面积(CAI)标准化身体大小差异。CAI 值与传统放射测量皮质指数(CI)进行比较,以评估该方法识别与年龄相关的骨丢失的能力。
CAI 值具有较高的观察者内和观察者间可重复性,并且与男性(r[n=39]=0.906,p=0.000)和女性(r[n=58]=0.925,p=0.000)的 CI 值具有很强的显著相关性。
ROI 方法补充了传统放射测量分析,为量化不完整第二掌骨的皮质骨提供了一种可靠的方法,从而最大限度地增加样本量,使骨骼获取和丢失的模式能够更全面地在考古组合中描绘。