L. Coppola Bove, C. L. Kirkpatrick, A. Vigil-Escalera Guirado, M. C. Botella López, K. I. Bos
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Individuals with differential diagnoses suggesting chronic systemic infectious diseases were sampled and bioinformatically screened for ancient pathogen DNA.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Results</h3>\n \n <p>Five non-adults (and no adults) presented skeletal evidence of chronic systemic infectious disease (1.87% of the population; 4.67% of non-adults). The preferred diagnoses for these individuals included tuberculosis, brucellosis, and malaria. Ancient DNA fragments assigned to the malaria-causing pathogen, <i>Plasmodium</i> spp., were identified in three of the five individuals. Observed pathology includes lesions generally consistent with malaria; however, additional lesions in two of the individuals may represent hitherto unknown variation in the skeletal manifestation of this disease or co-infection with tuberculosis or brucellosis. Additionally, spondylolysis was observed in one individual with skeletal lesions suggestive of infectious disease.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Conclusions</h3>\n \n <p>This study sheds light on the pathological landscape in Iberia during a time of great social, demographic, and environmental change. Genetic evidence challenges the hypothesis that malaria was absent from early medieval Iberia and demonstrates the value of combining osteological and archaeogenetic methods. Additionally, all of the preferred infectious diagnoses for the individuals included in this study (malaria, tuberculosis, and brucellosis) could have contributed to the febrile cases described in historical sources from this time.</p>\n </section>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":29759,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Biological Anthropology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ajpa.24994","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A morphological and molecular approach to investigating infectious disease in early medieval Iberia: The necropolis of La Olmeda (Palencia, Spain)\",\"authors\":\"L. Coppola Bove, C. L. Kirkpatrick, A. Vigil-Escalera Guirado, M. C. Botella López, K. I. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:在此,我们对可能导致北伊比利亚中世纪早期拉奥尔梅达(La Olmeda,公元 6-11 世纪)尸骨病变的传染病进行了调查:我们研究了至少 268 具遗骸(33 具成年女性遗骸、38 具成年男性遗骸、77 具性别不明/不确定的遗骸和 120 具非成年遗骸),包括有关节的遗骸和混合遗骸。对诊断为慢性系统性传染病的个体进行了采样,并对古病原体 DNA 进行了生物信息学筛选:结果:五具非成人(无成人)骨骼显示患有慢性系统性传染病(占总人数的 1.87%;占非成人的 4.67%)。这些人的首选诊断包括肺结核、布鲁氏菌病和疟疾。在五人中的三人身上发现了与疟疾病原体疟原虫有关的古 DNA 片段。观察到的病理变化包括与疟疾基本一致的病变;然而,其中两个人身上的其他病变可能代表了这种疾病骨骼表现中迄今未知的变异或与结核病或布鲁氏菌病的合并感染。此外,在一名骨骼病变提示感染性疾病的患者身上还发现了脊柱溶解症:这项研究揭示了伊比利亚在社会、人口和环境发生巨大变化时期的病理状况。遗传学证据对中世纪早期伊比利亚没有疟疾的假说提出了质疑,并证明了将骨骼学和考古学方法相结合的价值。此外,本研究中包含的所有首选传染病诊断(疟疾、肺结核和布鲁氏菌病)都可能是造成当时历史资料中描述的发热病例的原因。
A morphological and molecular approach to investigating infectious disease in early medieval Iberia: The necropolis of La Olmeda (Palencia, Spain)
Objective
Here we investigate infectious diseases that potentially contribute to osteological lesions in individuals from the early medieval necropolis of La Olmeda (6th-11th c. CE) in North Iberia.
Materials and methods
We studied a minimum number of 268 individuals (33 adult females; 38 adult males, 77 unknown/indeterminate sex; and 120 non-adults), including articulated and commingled remains. Individuals with differential diagnoses suggesting chronic systemic infectious diseases were sampled and bioinformatically screened for ancient pathogen DNA.
Results
Five non-adults (and no adults) presented skeletal evidence of chronic systemic infectious disease (1.87% of the population; 4.67% of non-adults). The preferred diagnoses for these individuals included tuberculosis, brucellosis, and malaria. Ancient DNA fragments assigned to the malaria-causing pathogen, Plasmodium spp., were identified in three of the five individuals. Observed pathology includes lesions generally consistent with malaria; however, additional lesions in two of the individuals may represent hitherto unknown variation in the skeletal manifestation of this disease or co-infection with tuberculosis or brucellosis. Additionally, spondylolysis was observed in one individual with skeletal lesions suggestive of infectious disease.
Conclusions
This study sheds light on the pathological landscape in Iberia during a time of great social, demographic, and environmental change. Genetic evidence challenges the hypothesis that malaria was absent from early medieval Iberia and demonstrates the value of combining osteological and archaeogenetic methods. Additionally, all of the preferred infectious diagnoses for the individuals included in this study (malaria, tuberculosis, and brucellosis) could have contributed to the febrile cases described in historical sources from this time.