1. Oldest evidence of tuberculosis in Argentina: A multidisciplinary investigation in an adult male skeleton from Saujil, Tinogasta, Catamarca (905-1030 CE).
- Author
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Luna LH, Aranda CM, Santos AL, Donoghue HD, Lee OY, Wu HHT, Besra GS, Minnikin DE, Llewellyn G, Williams CM, and Ratto N
- Subjects
- Adult, Argentina epidemiology, Bone and Bones microbiology, DNA, Bacterial analysis, History, 15th Century, History, 16th Century, History, Ancient, History, Medieval, Humans, Incidence, Male, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular epidemiology, Bone and Bones diagnostic imaging, DNA, Bacterial history, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Paleopathology methods, Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular history
- Abstract
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) has affected South American populations since ca. 200 years BCE. In Argentina, possible cases date from ca. 1000-1400 Common Era (CE). This paper describes the oldest (905-1030 CE) confirmed case of tuberculosis (TB) in a young adult male from Lomitas de Saujil (Tinogasta, Catamarca, Argentina). Osteolytic lesions on the bodies of the lower spine were macroscopically and radiographically identified. Bilateral new bone formation was seen on the visceral vertebral third of several ribs and in long bones, compatible with hypertrophic osteoarthropathy. Representative rib and hand bones gave profiles for MTC-specific C
27 -C32 mycocerosic acid lipid biomarkers; these were strongest in one heavily-lesioned lower rib, which also had MTC-diagnostic C76 -C89 mycolic acids and positive amplification of MTC-typical IS6110 aDNA fragments. During the first millennium CE, the intense social interaction, the spatial circumscription of villages among the pre-Hispanic societies in the mesothermal valleys of Catamarca and the fluid contacts with the Eastern lowlands, valleys and puna, were factors likely to favor disease transmission. It is proposed that TB arrived from northern Chile and dispersed towards the northeast into the Yocavil valley, where several cases of TB infection were macroscopically identified for a later chronology., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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