24 research outputs found
Possible Brucellosis in an Early Hominin Skeleton from Sterkfontein, South Africa
We report on the paleopathological analysis of the partial skeleton of the late Pliocene hominin species Australopithecus africanus Stw 431 from Sterkfontein, South Africa. A previous study noted the presence of lesions on vertebral bodies diagnosed as spondylosis deformans due to trauma. Instead, we suggest that these lesions are pathological changes due to the initial phases of an infectious disease, brucellosis. The macroscopic, microscopic and radiological appearance of the lytic lesions of the lumbar vertebrae is consistent with brucellosis. The hypothesis of brucellosis (most often associated with the consumption of animal proteins) in a 2.4 to 2.8 million year old hominid has a host of important implications for human evolution. The consumption of meat has been regarded an important factor in supporting, directing or altering human evolution. Perhaps the earliest (up to 2.5 million years ago) paleontological evidence for meat eating consists of cut marks on animal remains and stone tools that could have made these marks. Now with the hypothesis of brucellosis in A. africanus, we may have evidence of occasional meat eating directly linked to a fossil hominin
Origin, evolution and paleoepidemiology of brucellosis
Brucellosis is a worldwide disease. Although it has been eradicated in some countries, it continues
to be an important disease in many farming areas. Previous works have described the evolution
and diffusion of brucellosis in antiquity through direct analysis of ancient human remains
collected by the University Museum of Chieti, Italy, and by using paleopathological and
historical data. The earliest published case was reported in a skeletal individual dated to the
Middle Bronze Age. However, our research group has diagnosed vertebral brucellosis in the
partial skeleton of the late Pliocene Australopithecus africanus, demonstrating that this infectious
disease occasionally affected our direct ancestors 2.3–2.5 million years ago. The frequency
of brucellosis increased during the Roman period, when the disease would almost certainly have
been endemic in Roman society, and during the Middle Ages. Most paleopathological cases
involve adult male skeletal individuals, and lumbar vertebrae and sacroiliac joints are most
commonly involved