Sex-specific effects of environmental temperature during gestation on fluctuating asymmetry in deciduous teeth

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Emily Moes, Christopher W. Kuzawa, Heather J. H. Edgar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives

External environmental heat exposure during gestation impacts the physiology of human development in utero, but evidence for these impacts has not yet been explored in dentition. We examined deciduous teeth for fluctuating asymmetry (FA), a measure of developmental instability, together with gestational environmental temperature data drawn from historical weather statistics.

Materials and Methods

We measured dental casts from the longitudinal Burlington Growth Study, representing 172 participants (ages 3–6 years) with health records. FA was calculated from crown dimensions and intercuspal distances that develop during gestation. Multiple regression separated by sex (nfemale = 81) examined the effects of mean temperatures in each trimester, controlling for birth year.

Results

In females, increased temperatures during the first trimester are significantly associated with an increase in FA (p = 0.03), specifically during the second and third prenatal months (p = 0.03). There is no relationship between temperature and FA for either sex in the second or third trimesters, when enamel is formed.

Discussion

Dental instability may be sensitive to temperature in the first trimester in females during the scaffolding of crown shape and size in the earliest stages of tooth formation. Sexual dimorphism in growth investment strategies may explain the differences in results between males and females. Using enduring dental characteristics, these results advance our understanding of the effects of temperature on fetal physiology within a discrete period.

妊娠期环境温度对乳牙不对称波动的性别特异性影响
妊娠期间暴露于外部环境中的热量会影响人类在子宫内的生理发育,但这些影响的证据尚未在牙齿中进行探讨。我们研究了乳牙的波动不对称性(FA),这是一种衡量发育不稳定性的指标,同时还研究了从历史气象统计数据中提取的妊娠期环境温度数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.80
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