Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease: Past and Present

IF 1.1 3区 历史学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Ryan Frederick, Paola Ponce
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Legg–Calvé–Perthes disease (LCPD) is a rare idiopathic condition that primarily affects the femoral head. It is characterized by a sudden necrosis, which leads to permanent and irreversible changes of its normal anatomy. Likely due to its rarity and complex etiology, there is a lacuna of its study in archaeological literature. This paper attempts to address this issue by aiming to (1) gather all known examples of LCPD in the archaeological record worldwide; (2) based on etiological speculation, analyze how individuals may have developed LCPD in the past; (3) assess how LCPD may have affected these individuals; and (4) how they may have managed the effects. In this study, a wide range of resources pertaining to archaeology, osteology, paleopathology, and clinical studies were consulted. The information was extracted from a number of available case studies and osteological site reports despite data-access difficulties. In the archaeological record, there are 73 reported cases of LCPD affecting individuals, spanning from the Neolithic to the Postmedieval period, across the globe, with its highest peak in the Late Medieval period. Modern clinical literature has provided an empirical platform to investigate what may have caused LCPD in the past, though etiological conjecture continues to prevent any certainty in these extrapolations. The resulting prevalence of the cases of LCPD are also skewed by issues concerning skeletal preservation and inaccessible data, ultimately affecting its representation and the evaluation of the disease's laterality and sex preponderance. Nonetheless, physical debilitation caused by LCPD would have variably inhibited the individuals' mobility, causing pain, compromised quality of life, decline in mental state, and an inability to fully engage in ambulatory activities. However, coexisting osteological markers suggest methods of managing the disease's symptoms, such as resorting to an antalgic gait and/or using upper limb apparatus (crutch).

莱格-卡尔维-珀特氏症:过去与现在
legg - calv - perthes病(LCPD)是一种罕见的特发性疾病,主要影响股骨头。它的特点是突然坏死,导致其正常解剖结构的永久和不可逆转的变化。可能由于其罕见性和复杂的病因,考古文献对其研究存在空白。本文试图通过以下方法来解决这个问题:(1)收集世界范围内考古记录中所有已知的LCPD例子;(2)在病原学推测的基础上,分析个体在过去是如何患上LCPD的;(3)评估康乐及警务处对这些人士的影响;(4)他们是如何控制这些影响的。在这项研究中,广泛的资源有关考古学,骨学,古病理学和临床研究进行了咨询。尽管数据获取困难,但这些信息是从一些可用的案例研究和骨学现场报告中提取的。在考古记录中,有73例报告的LCPD影响个人,从新石器时代到后中世纪时期,在全球范围内,其中中世纪晚期达到高峰。现代临床文献提供了一个经验平台来调查过去可能导致LCPD的原因,尽管病因学的推测继续阻止这些推断的确定性。由此产生的LCPD病例的患病率也受到骨骼保存和无法获得数据的问题的影响,最终影响其代表性以及对疾病侧侧性和性别优势的评估。尽管如此,LCPD引起的身体衰弱会不同程度地抑制个体的活动能力,导致疼痛,生活质量下降,精神状态下降,无法充分参与走动活动。然而,同时存在的骨学标记提示了控制疾病症状的方法,例如采用止痛步态和/或使用上肢器械(拐杖)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
105
期刊介绍: The aim of the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology is to provide a forum for the publication of papers dealing with all aspects of the study of human and animal bones from archaeological contexts. The journal will publish original papers dealing with human or animal bone research from any area of the world. It will also publish short papers which give important preliminary observations from work in progress and it will publish book reviews. All papers will be subject to peer review. The journal will be aimed principally towards all those with a professional interest in the study of human and animal bones. This includes archaeologists, anthropologists, human and animal bone specialists, palaeopathologists and medical historians.
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