Jenna M. Dittmar , Piers D. Mitchell , Sarah A. Inskip , Craig Cessford , John E. Robb
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This research explores how the prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) in a medieval hospital was affected by the demographic and social changes that following the Black Death (1346–1353 CE), the initial years of the Second Plague Pandemic. To do this, skeletal remains of individuals buried at the Hospital of St John the Evangelist in Cambridge, England, that could be dated to living before (n = 77) or after (n = 55) the Black Death were assessed for evidence of TB (indicated by destructive lesions of the spine, ribs, large joints, and other recognised criteria). Overall, the odds of females having skeletal lesions caused by TB were over four times higher than males. No significant difference was detected in the prevalence rates in those who lived before and after the Black Death (7.8%, 6/77 before and 11.0%, 6/55 after). However, the odds of females having skeletal evidence of TB were over five times greater after the Black Death than they were before. These findings indicate that women may have been 1) more susceptible to TB, 2) surviving longer post-infection than men, and/or 3) that women with TB were more likely to be admitted to the Hospital especially following the Black Death. It is also possible that impairment due to TB infection may have been a contributing factor for entry into the Hospital for women but not men.
本研究探讨了第二次鼠疫大流行的最初几年黑死病(公元1346-1353年)之后人口和社会变化对中世纪医院结核病(TB)流行率的影响。为此,研究人员对埋在英国剑桥圣约翰福音医院(Hospital of St John the Evangelist)的遗骨进行了评估,以寻找结核病的证据(通过脊柱、肋骨、大关节和其他公认标准的破坏性病变来表明),这些遗骨可能生活在黑死病之前(n = 77)或之后(n = 55)。总体而言,女性患结核病引起的骨骼病变的几率是男性的四倍多。黑死病发生前后人群患病率差异无统计学意义(7.8%,发生前6/77;11.0%,发生后6/55)。然而,在黑死病之后,女性骨骼上有结核病证据的几率是之前的五倍多。这些发现表明,女性可能1)更容易感染结核病,2)感染后存活时间比男性更长,和/或3)女性结核病患者更有可能住院,尤其是在黑死病之后。还有一种可能是,结核病感染造成的损伤可能是女性而非男性入院的一个促成因素。
期刊介绍:
Tuberculosis is a speciality journal focusing on basic experimental research on tuberculosis, notably on bacteriological, immunological and pathogenesis aspects of the disease. The journal publishes original research and reviews on the host response and immunology of tuberculosis and the molecular biology, genetics and physiology of the organism, however discourages submissions with a meta-analytical focus (for example, articles based on searches of published articles in public electronic databases, especially where there is lack of evidence of the personal involvement of authors in the generation of such material). We do not publish Clinical Case-Studies.
Areas on which submissions are welcomed include:
-Clinical TrialsDiagnostics-
Antimicrobial resistance-
Immunology-
Leprosy-
Microbiology, including microbial physiology-
Molecular epidemiology-
Non-tuberculous Mycobacteria-
Pathogenesis-
Pathology-
Vaccine development.
This Journal does not accept case-reports.
The resurgence of interest in tuberculosis has accelerated the pace of relevant research and Tuberculosis has grown with it, as the only journal dedicated to experimental biomedical research in tuberculosis.