16 research outputs found

    Remembering Juan Navia

    No full text

    Prevalence of developmental enamel defects and dental caries in rural pre-school Thai children

    No full text
    The prevalence of developmental enamel defects and dental caries was assessed in 344 Karen children aged 1-4 years who were chronically (70 per cent) and acutely malnourished (9.3 per cent) The teeth were cleaned with gauze to facilitate detection of hypoplastic lesions on labial surfaces of maxillary incisors. At least one tooth with defective enamel was seen in 31.9 per cent of children, while enamel hypoplasia was present in 22.7 per cent of children. Enamel defects were found in 21.2 per cent of teeth, with hypoplasia and opacities occurring in 14.6 and 6.6 per cent of teeth, respectively. Gender did not alter the prevalence of defects. The upper central incisors were affected more than lateral incisors. The prevalence of dental caries was 31.9 per cent with a mean dt of 1.1. The prevalence of caries associated with enamel hypoplasia was significantly greater than that associated with opacities and sound enamel (

    Making sense of medieval mouths: Investigating sex differences of dental pathological lesions in a late medieval Italian community.

    No full text
    OBJECTIVES: Bioarchaeological investigations of sex-based differences in the prevalence of dental pathological lesions, particularly caries, have drawn considerable attention, and out of this work, two dominant models have emerged. Traditionally, the first model interprets sex-related patterns in caries as a product of gendered differences in diet. A more recent model interprets a generally higher propensity for caries prevalence in females in light of reproductive ecology. To test the hypothesis that females have higher risk of caries in accordance with reproductive ecology, we examined and analyzed caries prevalence and other potentially synergistic oral pathological lesions in a late medieval (A.D. 1300-1500) Italian archaeological sample. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We examined sex- and age-related prevalence in caries and other oral pathological lesions in a late medieval Italian skeletal assemblage excavated from Villamagna consisting of 38 females and 37 males (n = 1,534 teeth). We examined age- and sex-related patterns in six dental traits: antemortem tooth loss, caries, calculus, periapical inflammation, tooth wear, and periodontitis. RESULTS: Significant age-related increases in antemortem tooth loss, caries, calculus, and tooth wear were observed in both males and females. However, there was a lack of expected sex differences in oral pathological lesions, with instead older males exhibiting significantly more antemortem tooth loss and corrected caries than females. DISCUSSION: Results are discussed in relation to the ethnohistoric context of medieval rural dietary practices as well as biomedical salivary literature, which suggest that dietary changes throughout the life course may have facilitated trade-offs that buffered females from higher rates of dental pathological lesions
    corecore