Adapting Clinical Tooth Wear Assessment Methods for Biological Anthropology Contexts

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Ian Towle, Luca Fiorenza
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Abstract

Objectives

Tooth wear is increasingly recognized as an adaptive process that can help optimize mastication and maintain oral health. In this study, we apply clinical wear-assessment methods to quantify occlusal tissue loss in first molars of seven Australian Aboriginal individuals from Yuendumu (1950s–1970s), whose diet combined traditional hunter-gatherer foods with processed Western items.

Materials and Methods

High-resolution surface scans of dental casts were analyzed using WearCompare to assess wear patterns during dental development and evaluate the applicability of these tools in a biological anthropology context.

Results

Clinical methods designed for assessing pathological wear can effectively capture normal physiological wear in populations with medium-high tissue loss rates. Average annual tissue loss was 4 mm3 (0.05 mm3/mm2), with the highest wear regions losing an average of 215 μm in thickness per year. Substantial temporal variation in the magnitude and distribution of wear, and variation among individuals, was observed, reflecting changes in occlusion, masticatory forces, craniofacial growth, and cultural/dietary behaviors all in association with dental eruption sequences.

Discussion

These findings highlight the utility of digital quantification of dental tissue loss for anthropological research. In particular, these methods have significant potential for assessing tooth wear in contemporary human and non-human primate samples, and for refining macroscopic wear scoring systems in paleontological and archaeological contexts by using modern analogues for calibration and refinement. These methods can also complement other wear analysis techniques (e.g., microwear analysis, occlusal fingerprint analysis), as well as studies on tooth morphology and structure, offering broader applications in evolutionary inferences and dietary reconstructions.

Abstract Image

适应生物人类学背景的临床牙齿磨损评估方法
目的牙齿磨损是一种适应过程,有助于优化咀嚼功能,维护口腔健康。在这项研究中,我们应用临床磨损评估方法来量化来自Yuendumu(1950 - 1970)的7名澳大利亚原住民的第一磨牙咬合组织损失,他们的饮食结合了传统的狩猎-采集食物和西方加工食品。材料和方法使用WearCompare分析了牙模的高分辨率表面扫描,以评估牙齿发育过程中的磨损模式,并评估这些工具在生物人类学背景下的适用性。结果病理磨损的临床评估方法可以有效地捕捉到中、高组织损失率人群的正常生理磨损。年平均组织损失为4 mm3 (0.05 mm3/mm2),最高磨损区域的年平均厚度损失为215 μm。观察到磨损的大小和分布在时间上的巨大差异,以及个体之间的差异,反映了咬合、咀嚼力、颅面生长和文化/饮食行为的变化,这些变化都与牙萌序列有关。这些发现强调了牙科组织损失的数字量化在人类学研究中的应用。特别是,这些方法在评估当代人类和非人类灵长类动物样本的牙齿磨损方面具有重要的潜力,并且通过使用现代类似物进行校准和改进,可以改进古生物学和考古学背景下的宏观磨损评分系统。这些方法还可以补充其他磨损分析技术(如微磨损分析、咬合指纹分析)以及牙齿形态和结构研究,在进化推断和饮食重建方面提供更广泛的应用。
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CiteScore
4.80
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