Maciej Janeczek , Daniel Makowiecki , Edyta Pasicka , Aleksandra Rozwadowska , Rafał Ciaputa
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
The purpose of this article is to try to determine the probable cause of the disease from which the study animal suffered.
Materials
The skeletal material included a caudal fragment of a cattle mandible. The specimen, exhibiting chronic disease was separated from approximately 10,000 early medieval cattle remains discovered during excavations of the former Kruszwica stronghold.
Methods
The bone was underwent macroscopic, radiological and histopathological examination.
Results
Location, macroscopic, microscopic and X-ray images of the lesions within the examined mandible indicate it could have been caused by the actinomycosis.
Conclusions
In the face of infection, no effective therapies were undertaken in the Middle Ages.
Significance
Descriptions of lumpy jaw in the paleopathological literature are rare. This disease, due to its background and course, eliminated animals from breeding for centuries until the era of antibiotics. The case described in our paper is in an advanced stage, but its adult age suggests that efforts were possibly made to keep the cow alive as long as possible, indicating the significant economic importance of the animal.
Limitations
This analysis is limited by the absence of other anatomical elements of the affected animal, which impacts the interpretation of the palaeopathological bone.
Suggestions for further research
It is recommended that similar studies are conducted on better preserved and more numerous cattle assemblages.
本文旨在尝试确定研究动物患病的可能原因。该标本表现出慢性疾病,是从前克鲁兹维察要塞发掘过程中发现的约 10,000 头中世纪早期牛的遗骸中分离出来的。结果受检下颌骨内病变的位置、宏观、微观和 X 射线图像表明,它可能是由放线菌病引起的。在抗生素时代之前的几个世纪里,这种疾病因其背景和病程而使动物无法繁殖。本文中描述的病例处于晚期,但其成年年龄表明,当时人们可能努力让奶牛尽可能多地存活,这也说明了这种动物在经济上的重要性。
期刊介绍:
Paleopathology is the study and application of methods and techniques for investigating diseases and related conditions from skeletal and soft tissue remains. The International Journal of Paleopathology (IJPP) will publish original and significant articles on human and animal (including hominids) disease, based upon the study of physical remains, including osseous, dental, and preserved soft tissues at a range of methodological levels, from direct observation to molecular, chemical, histological and radiographic analysis. Discussion of ways in which these methods can be applied to the reconstruction of health, disease and life histories in the past is central to the discipline, so the journal would also encourage papers covering interpretive and theoretical issues, and those that place the study of disease at the centre of a bioarchaeological or biocultural approach. Papers dealing with historical evidence relating to disease in the past (rather than history of medicine) will also be published. The journal will also accept significant studies that applied previously developed techniques to new materials, setting the research in the context of current debates on past human and animal health.