Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


2016 | 79 | 1 | 1-16

Article title

Palaeopathology and its relevance to understanding health and disease today: the impact of the environment on health, past and present

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This paper considers the discipline of palaeopathology, how it has developed, how it is studied, and what limitations present challenges to analysis. The study of disease has a long history and has probably most rapidly developed over the last 40-50 years with the development of methods, and particularly ancient pathogen DNA analysis. While emphasizing that palaeopathology has close synergies to evolutionary medicine, it focuses then on three ‘case studies’ that illustrate the close interaction people have had with their environments and how that has impacted their health. Upper and lower respiratory tract disease has affected sinuses and ribs, particularly in urban contexts, and tuberculosis in particular has been an ever present disease throughout thousands of years of our existence. Ancient DNA methods are now allowing us to explore how strains of the bacteria causing TB have changed through time. Vitamin D deficiency and ‘phossy jaw’ are also described, both potentially related to polluted environments, and possibly to working conditions in the industrial period. Access to UV light is emphasized as a preventative factor for rickets and where a person lives is important (latitude). The painful stigmatizing ‘phossy jaw’ appears to be a condition related to the match making industries. Finally, thoughts for the future are outlined, and two key concerns: a close consideration of ethical issues and human remains, especially with destructive analyses, and thinking more about how palaeopathological research can impact people beyond academia.

Publisher

Year

Volume

79

Issue

1

Pages

1-16

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-03-01
received
2016-02-03
online
2016-03-16

Contributors

  • Department of Archaeology, Durham University, Great Britain

References

  • Armelagos GJ, Brown PJ, Turner B. 2005. Evolutionary, historical and political economic perspectives on health and disease. Soc Sci Med 61:755-65.
  • Barnett R. 2014. The sick rose. Disease and the art of medical illustration. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Bennike P. 1985. Paleopathology of Danish skeletons. Copenhagen, Denmark: Akademisk Forlag.
  • Bos KI. et al. 2014. Pre-Columbian mycobacterial genomes reveal seals as a source of New World human tuberculosis. Nature 514:4-497.
  • Bouwman AS, Kennedy SL, Muller R, Stephens RH, Holst M, Caffell AC, Roberts CA, Brown TA. 2012. Genotype of a historic strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109(45):18511-6.
  • Brickley M, Buteux S. 2006. St Martin’s Uncovered: Investigations in the Churchyard of St. Martin’s-in-the-Bull Ring, Birmingham, 2001. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Brickley M, McKinley J editors. 2004. Guidelines to the standards for recording human remains. Reading: Institute of Field Archaeologists Paper Number 7.
  • Brickley M et al. 2009 Socio-culturally mediated disease: rickets and scurvy. Poster presented in the symposium Reconstructing health and disease in Europe. The early Middle Ages through the Industrial Period. American Association of Physical Anthropologists Annual Meeting, Chicago, USA.
  • Brown TA, Brown K 2011. Biomolecular archaeology. An introduction. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Buikstra JE, Roberts CA. (eds) 2012. The global history of palaeopathology. Pioneers and prospects. Oxford: University Press.
  • Buikstra J, Ubelaker D. (eds) 1994. Standards for data collection from human skeletal remains. Arkansas: Archeological Survey Research Seminar Series 44.
  • Cohen M. 1989. Health and the rise of civilisation. Yale, Yale University Press.
  • Cohen M, Armelagos G. (eds) 2013. Palaeopathology at the origins of agriculture. Reprint of 1984 publication). Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida.
  • Cohen MN, Crane-Kramer GMM. (eds) 2007. Ancient Health: Skeletal Indicators of Agricultural and Economic Intensification. Gainesville, Florida: Florida University Press.
  • Connell B, Gray Jones A, Redfern R, Walker D. 2012. A bioarchaeological study of the medieval burials on the site of St Mary Spital. Excavations at Spitalfields Market, London E1, 1991-2007.London: Museum of London Archaeology Monograph 60.
  • Cooper A, Poinar H. 2000. Ancient DNA. Do it right or not at all. Science 289:1139.
  • Eyler WR, Monsein LH, Beute GH, Tilley B, Schultz LR, Schmitt WGH. 1996. Rib enlargement in patients with chronic pleural disease. Am J Radiol 167:921-6.
  • Fletcher HA, Donoghue HD, Holton J, Pap I, Spigelman M. 2003. Widespread occurrence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA from 18th-19th century Hungarians. Am J Phys Anthropol 120:144-52.
  • Gowland R, Knüsel C editors. 2006. Social archaeology of funerary remains. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Grauer AL. 2008. Macroscopic analysis and data collection in palaeopathology. In: R Pinhasi, S Mays, editors. Advances in human palaeopathology. Chichester: Wiley. 57-76.
  • Groves SE, Roberts CA, Lucy S, Pearson G, Gröcke DR, Nowell G, Macpherson CG, Young G. 2013. Mobility histories of 7th-9th century AD people buried at Early Medieval Bamburgh, Northumberland, England. Am J Phys Anthropol 151:462-76.
  • Holgate ST, Frew A. 2002. Respiratory disease. In: P Kumar, M Clark editors. Kumar and Clark Clinical medicine. 5th edition. Edinburgh: WB Saunders. 833-955.
  • Holick MF. 2007 .Vitamin D Deficiency. New England J Medicine 357:266-81.
  • Hu P, Qin YH, Jing CX, Lu L, Hu B, Du PF. 2011. Does the geographical gradient of ApoE4 allele exist in China? A systemic comparison among multiple Chinese populations. Mol Biol Rep 38:489-94.[Crossref]
  • Kintigh KW, Altschul JH, Beaudry MC, Drennan RD, Kinzig AP, Kohler TA, Limp WF, Maschner HDG, Muchener WK, Pauketat TR, Peregrone P, Sabloff JA, Wilkinson TJ, Wright HT, Zeder MA. 2014a Grand challenges for archaeology. Proc National Academy of Sciences 111:879-80.
  • Kintigh KW, Altschul JH, Beaudry MC, Drennan RD, Kinzig AP, Kohler TA, Limp WF, Maschner HDG, Muchener WK, Pauketat TR, Peregrone P, Sabloff JA, Wilkinson TJ, Wright HT, Zeder MA. 2014a. Grand challenges for archaeology. 2014b Grand challenges for archaeology. American Antiquity 79:5-24.
  • Lambert P. 2002. Rib lesions in a prehistoric Puebloan sample from Southwestern Colorado. Am J Phys Anthropol 117:281-92.
  • Lukacs JR. 2007. Climate, subsistence and health in prehistoric India. The biological impact of a short-term subsistence shift. In: MN Cohen, GMM Crane-Kramer, editors. Ancient Health: Skeletal Indicators of Agricultural and Economic Intensification. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. 237-49.
  • Mays S. 2008. Radiography and allied techniques in the palaeopathology of skeletal remains. In R Pinhasi, S Mays, editors. Advances in human palaeopathology. Chichester: Wiley. 77-100.
  • Mays S. 2012. The relationship between palaeopathology and the clinical sciences. In: AL Grauer, editor. A companion to paleopathology. Cambridge: University Press. 285-309.
  • Mays M, Brickley M, Ives R. 2009. Growth and vitamin D deficiency in a population from 19th century Birmingham, England. Int J Osteoarchaeol 19:406-15.[Crossref]
  • Mitchell PD. 2011. Retrospective diagnosis and the use of historical texts for investigating disease in the past. Int J Paleopathol 1:81-8.
  • Molleson T, Cox M. 1993. The Spitalfields Project. Volume 2: The Anthropology: The Middling Sort. York: Council for British Archaeology Research Report 86.
  • Müller R, Roberts CA, Brown T. 2014a. Biomolecular identification of ancient Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex DNA in human remains from Britain and Continental Europe. Am J Phys Anthropol 153:178-89.
  • Müller R, Roberts CA, Brown T. 2014b. Genotyping of ancient Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains reveals historic genetic diversity. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281(1781): 2013-3236.
  • Nesse RM, Williams GC. 1994. Why we get sick. The new science of Darwinian medicine. New York: Vintage Books.
  • Nicklish N, Maixner F, Ganslmeier R, Friederich S, Dresely V, Meller H, Zink A, Alt KW. 2012. Rib lesions in skeletons from early Neolithic sites in central Germany: on the trail of tuberculosis at the onset of agriculture. Am J Phys Anthropol 149:391-404.
  • Oxenham M, Tayles N editors. 2006. Bioarchaeology of Southeast Asia. Cambridge: University Press.
  • Park K. 1993. Black death. In: K Kiple, editor. The Cambridge world history of human disease. Cambridge: University Press. 612-15.
  • Perry MA. 2012. Bioarchaeology and Behavior: The People of the Ancient Near East (Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, Regional, and Global). Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida.
  • Pinhasi R, Stock JT editors. 2011. Human Bioarchaeology of the transition to agriculture. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Preus HR, Marvik OJ, Selvig KA, Bennike P. 2011. Ancient bacterial DNA (aDNA) in dental calculus from archaeological human remains. J Archaeol Sci 38:1827-31.[Crossref]
  • Ortner DJ. 2012. Differential diagnosis and issues in disease classification. In: AL Grauer, editor. A companion to paleopathology. Cambridge: University Press. 250-267.
  • Rawcliffe C. 2006. Leprosy in medieval England. Woodbridge: Boydell Press.
  • Resnick D, Niwayama G. 1995. Osteomyelitis, septic arthritis and soft tissue infection: orgnaisms. In: D Resnick, editor. Diagnosis of bone and joint disorders. 3rd edition. London: WB Saunders. 2448-558.
  • Roberts CA, Caffell A, Filipek KL, Gowland R, Jakob T. 2016. Til Poison Phosphorous Brought them Death’: A potentially occupationally- related disease in a post-medieval skeleton from northeast England. Int J Paleopathol 13:39-48.
  • Roberts CA. 2007. A bioarcheological study of maxillary sinusitis. Am J Phys Anthropol 133:792-807.
  • Roberts CA. 2010. Adaptation of populations to changing environments: Bioarchaeological perspectives on health for the past, present and future. Bulletins et Mémoires de la Société d’Anthropologie de Paris 22:38-46.
  • Roberts CA. 2009. Human remains in archaeology: a handbook. York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Roberts CA. 2015a. What did agriculture do for us? The bioarchaeology of health and diet. In: G Barker, C Goucher, editors. The Cambridge World History. Volume 2: A world with agriculture, 12,000 BCE-500 CE. Cambridge: University Press. 93-123.
  • Roberts CA. 2015b. Old World tuberculosis: evidence from human remains with a review of current research and future prospects. Tuberculosis 95: S117-21.
  • Roberts CA, Buikstra JE. 2003. The bioarcheology of tuberculosis: a global view on a re-emerging disease. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida.
  • Roberts CA, Cox M. 2003. Health and disease in Britain: prehistory to the present day. Gloucester; Sutton Publishing.
  • Roberts C, Manchester K. 2005. The archaeology of disease. 3rd edition. Stroud: Sutton Publishing.
  • Roberts CA, Ingham S. 2008. Using ancient DNA analysis in palaeopathology: a critical analysis of published papers with recommendations for future work. Int J Osteoarchaeol 18:600-13.[Crossref]
  • Roberts C, Lucy D, Manchester K. 1994. Inflammatory lesions of ribs: an analysis of the Terry Collection. Am J Phys Anthropol 95:169-82.
  • Santos AL, Roberts CA. 2001. A picture of tuberculosis in young Portuguese people in the early 20th century. Am J Phys Anthropol 115:38-49.
  • Spigelman M, Lemma E. 1993. The use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis in ancient skeletons. Int J Osteoarchaeol 3:137-43.[Crossref]
  • Stearns S. 2012. Evolutionary medicine: its scope, interest and potential. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 279:4305-4321.
  • Steckel RH, Rose JC editors. 2002. The backbone of history. Health and nutrition in the Western Hemisphere. Cambridge: University Press.
  • Sundman EA, Kjellström A. 2013. Signs of Sinusitis in Times of Urbanization in Viking Age-Early Medieval Sweden. J Archaeol Sci 40:4457-65.[Crossref]
  • Tayles N, Domett K, Nelsen K. 2000. Agriculture and dental caries? The case of rice in prehistoric Southeast Asia. World Archaeolology 32:68-83.[Crossref]
  • Taylor GM, Young DB, Mays S. 2005. Genotypic analysis of the earliest known prehistoric case of tuberculosis in Britain. J Clin Microbiol 43:2236-40.
  • Thomas R. 2012. Nonhuman paleopathology. In: JE Buikstra, CA Roberts, editors. The global history of palaeopathology. Pioneers and prospects. Oxford: University Press. 652-64.
  • Trinkaus E. 2005. Pathology and the posture of the La Chapelle-aux-Saints Neandertal. American J Physical Anthropology 67:19-41.
  • Turner-Walker G, Mays S. 2008. Histological studies of ancient bone. In: R Pinhasi, S Mays, editors. Advances in human palaeopathology. Chichester: Wiley. 121-46.
  • Venkat A, Asher SL, Wolf L, Geiderman JM et al. 2015. Ethical Issues in the Response to Ebola Virus Disease in United States Emergency Departments: A Position Paper of the American College of Emergency Physicians, the Emergency Nurses Association, and the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. Academic Emergency Medicine 22:605-615.[Crossref]
  • Wilkinson R, Pickett K. 2009. The spirit level. Why equality is better for everyone. London: Penguin Books.
  • Wilson KJW. 1990. Ross and Wilson Anatomy and Physiology in health and illness. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
  • Wood JW, Milner GR, Harpending HC, Weiss KM. 1992. The osteological paradox. Problems of inferring health from skeletal samples. Curr Anthropol 33:343-70.
  • World Bank. 2015. The Socio-Economic Impacts of Ebola in Liberia. Results from a High Frequency Cell Phone Survey Round 5. April 15, 2015. World Bank Group.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_anre-2016-0001
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.