Berner Margit, Pany-Kucera Doris, Doneus Nives, Sladek Vladimír, Gamble Michelle, Eggers Sabine
Department of Anthropology, Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria.
Department of Anthropology, Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria.
Int J Paleopathol. 2021 Jun;33:113-127. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2021.04.003. Epub 2021 Apr 21.
This paper aims to contribute to the definition of ancient rare diseases in skeletons displaying pathologies associated with paralysis. It uses a new suite of methods, which can be applied to challenging cases of possible paralysis in archaeologically-derived human skeletal material, specifically applied to the identification of poliomyelitis.
An adult male skeleton from Roman Halbturn, Austria.
Morphological and entheseal change analyses, CT scans, X-rays, cross-section morphology, and histology, alongside modern clinical, as well as historic, literature were used to discuss paralyses.
The results suggest a diagnosis of poliomyelitis; now considered a rare disease, but perhaps ubiquitous in antiquity, thus complicating the definition of 'rare disease'.
The integrated methodological procedures employed for this case constitutes a replicable and thorough approach to diagnosis, and explores the nature of ancient rare diseases. Due to the socio-environmental aspects of poliomyelitis transmission, it is likely that polio was likely not rare in the past. Therefore, the definition of 'rare diseases in the past' must include rarely occurring rarely diagnosed diseases due to biases and challenges within the archaeological and environmental record.
The developed suite of methods has not been applied to establish a diagnosis of polio in the past.
The individual considered in this study is fairly well-preserved; thus, this set of analyses may not be applicable to all remains where preservation is poor or highly fragmentary, and the discussion of rare diseases requires relatively secure diagnoses and context.
Large collections and series of skeletal human remains are recommended to develop definitive conclusions.
本文旨在为患有与瘫痪相关病理特征的骨骼中古代罕见疾病的定义提供参考。它采用了一套新方法,可应用于考古发掘出的人类骨骼材料中可能存在瘫痪情况的具有挑战性的案例,尤其适用于小儿麻痹症的鉴定。
来自奥地利罗马哈尔布特恩的一具成年男性骨骼。
运用形态学和附着点变化分析、CT扫描、X射线、横截面形态学和组织学,以及现代临床和历史文献来探讨瘫痪情况。
结果表明诊断为小儿麻痹症;小儿麻痹症如今被视为罕见疾病,但在古代可能很普遍,因此使“罕见疾病”的定义变得复杂。
该案例所采用的综合方法程序构成了一种可重复且全面的诊断方法,并探索了古代罕见疾病的本质。由于小儿麻痹症传播的社会环境因素,过去小儿麻痹症可能并不罕见。因此,“过去的罕见疾病”的定义必须包括由于考古和环境记录中的偏差及挑战而很少发生且很少被诊断出的疾病。
过去尚未应用所开发的这套方法来诊断小儿麻痹症。
本研究中所考虑的个体保存相当完好;因此,这组分析可能不适用于所有保存状况差或高度碎片化的遗骸,而且对罕见疾病的讨论需要相对可靠的诊断和背景信息。
建议使用大量人类骨骼遗骸集合和系列来得出确定性结论。