‘paleo-dental future’

Dental Caries in the 19th Century

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

The good preservation of archaeological teeth is a valuable source of information paleo-dental. One difficulty is the scarcity of sets of references to well-documented comparisons between past and present populations in Europe. The study, also in collaboration with S. Hillson authoritative in paleo-dentistry by SN Wasterlain will help fill this gap.

The authors studied tooth decay and tooth loss in the ante-mortem series of skeletons of the 19th century of Coimbra, Portugal, for which we know the identity and occupation of each subject. They analyzed 600 individuals and over 9,500 teeth. The main findings are the absence in this population of sexual variation important although the upper teeth are more affected women, the increase in caries prevalence with age, reached a preferential sectors premolars and molars and surfaces occlusal. The periodontium is not correlated to caries. (more…)

Tags: , ,
Posted in Dental Caries, Dental Treatment | 3 Comments »