Keywords :
LEH; crown height; dental attrition; enamel defects; methodological standardization; non‐specific stress markers; occlusal wear; Humans; History, Medieval; Male; Female; Adult; Dental Enamel Hypoplasia/pathology; Dental Enamel Hypoplasia/history; Tooth Wear/pathology; Tooth Wear/history; Dental Enamel Hypoplasia; Tooth Wear; Anatomy; Anthropology
Abstract :
[en] [en] OBJECTIVES: This study proposes a standardized, empirically grounded framework for assessing the recordability of linear enamel hypoplasia (LEH) in archeological dental samples. Despite the frequent use of LEH as a skeletal stress indicator, there is no consensus on whether and how to account for dental wear in recording protocols.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analyzed the permanent right teeth of 497 medieval and early modern individuals to assess how dental wear affects the visibility and diagnostic utility of hypoplastic defects across different crown regions. For a given tooth, we assessed if there is a region that tends to be (1) less (or more) recordable than others, (2) less (or more) frequently affected by LEH than others, and (3) less (or more) informative with respect to the presence or absence of LEH than others.
RESULTS: The occlusal third was significantly less recordable and rarely provides additional data beyond the middle and cervical thirds. Excluding the occlusal third has minimal effect on overall LEH prevalence, while omitting the middle or cervical thirds leads to marked underestimation.
DISCUSSION: These results highlight the importance of incorporating wear-based inclusion criteria into LEH recording protocols. We recommend including only teeth with dental wear affecting less than half of the crown. These findings support the development of standardized inclusion criteria based on crown wear to enhance the consistency and comparability of data on enamel hypoplastic defects across studies and populations.
Funding text :
Funding: The recording of enamel hypoplastic defects was conducted by SK as part of doctoral research funded by the Labex Sciences Arch\u00E9ologiques de Bordeaux (LaScArBx) research program \u201CEpidemics and Societies: Funerary Palethnology and Paleoepidemiology\u201D (dir. D. Castex), with support from the French State's Agence Nationale de la Recherche under the Investissements d'avenir program (ANR-10-LABX-52). Additional funding was provided by the regional project \u201CEpidemic Disturbances: Diagnosis, Diffusion, and Funerary Practices\u201D (dir. D. Castex, R\u00E9gion Aquitaine, 2014\u20132017), hosted by the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme d'Aquitaine. The present work was also partly funded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) through the International Research Project (IRP) CONSENSUS, \u201CRecording activity-related changes and health indicators on the human skeleton\u201D (2023\u20132027). S.K. gratefully acknowledges the support and generosity of the many researchers and institutions who facilitated access to the osteoarchaeological collections from Rouen (UMR 6273 CRAHAM, Caen, France), Toulouse (SRA Occitanie, Toulouse, France), Hereford (BARC, Bradford, UK), Dreux (UMR 5199 PACEA, Bordeaux, France), Les F\u00E9dons (UMR 7268 ADES, Marseille, France), and Dendermond/Termonde (RBINS, Brussels, Belgium). This work is dedicated to the memory of Jaroslav Br\u016F\u017Eek, whose methodological research in biological anthropology has profoundly inspired many of us.The recording of enamel hypoplastic defects was conducted by SK as part of doctoral research funded by the Labex Sciences Arch\u00E9ologiques de Bordeaux (LaScArBx) research program \u201CEpidemics and Societies: Funerary Palethnology and Paleoepidemiology\u201D (dir. D. Castex), with support from the French State's Agence Nationale de la Recherche under the Investissements d'avenir program (ANR\u201010\u2010LABX\u201052). Additional funding was provided by the regional project \u201CEpidemic Disturbances: Diagnosis, Diffusion, and Funerary Practices\u201D (dir. D. Castex, R\u00E9gion Aquitaine, 2014\u20132017), hosted by the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme d'Aquitaine. The present work was also partly funded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) through the International Research Project (IRP) CONSENSUS, \u201CRecording activity\u2010related changes and health indicators on the human skeleton\u201D (2023\u20132027). Funding:
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