16 results on '"Pany-Kucera D"'
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2. The New ‘Coimbra Method’: A Biologically Appropriate Method for Recording Specific Features of Fibrocartilaginous Entheseal Changes
- Author
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Henderson, C. Y., primary, Mariotti, V., additional, Pany‐Kucera, D., additional, Villotte, S., additional, and Wilczak, C., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Recording Specific Entheseal Changes of Fibrocartilaginous Entheses: Initial Tests Using the Coimbra Method
- Author
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Henderson, C.Y., Mariotti, Valentina, Pany-Kucera, D., Villotte, Sébastien, Wilczak, C., Centro de Investigação em Antropologia e Saúde (CIAS), Universidade de Coimbra [Coimbra], Department of Archaeology, Durham University, Anthropologie bio-culturelle, Droit, Ethique et Santé (ADES), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-EFS ALPES MEDITERRANEE-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Experimental Evolutionary Biology, Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna [Bologna] (UNIBO), Department of Anthropology Vienna, Austria, Natural History Museum [Vienna] (NHM), Department of Anthropology Vienn, University of Vienna [Vienna], De la Préhistoire à l'Actuel : Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie (PACEA), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Archaeological, Geographical and Environmental Sciences, University of Bradford, Department of Anthropology San Francisco, State University, C. Y. Henderson, V. Mariotti, D. Pany-Kucera, S. Villotte, and C. Wilczak
- Subjects
musculoskeletal stress markers (MSM) ,ageing ,SIMON Collection ,enthesi ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,methodology ,Geneva ,enthesis ,enthesopathy - Abstract
A working group was established in 2009 during a workshop in Coimbra, Portugal to review the various methodologies used to record entheseal changes (EC) and develop a standardised system to facilitate comparisons across studies. This paper presents the fi rst results of the Coimbra method, a new qualitative method for recording fi brocartilaginous entheses based on the types of changes observed. Materials and methods: The new method divides the enthesis into a margin (only the area opposite the acute angle of fi bre attachment) and surface (which also includes the remaining margin). Five features are recorded: bone formation, erosion, fi ne porosity, macro-porosity and cavitation. A total of 67 male ske- letons from the identi fi ed SIMON collection, Geneva, Switzerland, all of whom were manual workers and aged between 20 and 79years, were used for this study. Six skeletons were used by the authors as exem- plars to determine standard criteria for recording each change. Thirty male skeletons were selected to test intra-observer and inter-observer error of the new method. An additional 31 skeletons were used for a pre- liminary test of the relationship between EC and age, using exploratory statistics and ordinal regression. Results: Intra-observer and inter-observer error had a similar percentage agreement of around 70%. The exploratory statistics indicated a general trend for increased scores of each feature with age, but ordinal regression demonstrated that this was not statistically signi fi cant ( p < 0.05) for all features. Discussion: The recording method is repeatable for some entheses. The effect of the ageing process is dependent on enthesis and EC feature. Unlike most methods, the Coimbra method records EC features in detail; this has the advantage of allowing studies of the relationship between different EC and age as well as sex and occupation. Further studies on larger identi fi ed skeletal collections are needed to test the effect of age, sex and occupation.
- Published
- 2013
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4. Recording Specific Entheseal Changes of Fibrocartilaginous Entheses: Initial Tests Using the Coimbra Method
- Author
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Henderson, C. Y., primary, Mariotti, V., additional, Pany-Kucera, D., additional, Villotte, S., additional, and Wilczak, C., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. In search of consensus: Terminology for entheseal changes (EC)
- Author
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Villotte, S., Assis, S., Cardoso, F.A., Henderson, C.Y., Mariotti, V., Milella, M., Pany-Kucera, D., Speith, Nivien, Wilczak, C.A., Jurmain, R., Villotte, S., Assis, S., Cardoso, F.A., Henderson, C.Y., Mariotti, V., Milella, M., Pany-Kucera, D., Speith, Nivien, Wilczak, C.A., and Jurmain, R.
- Abstract
This article presents a consensus terminology for entheseal changes that was developed in English by an international team of scholars and then translated into French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and German. Use of a standard, neutral terminology to describe entheseal morphology will reduce misunderstandings between researchers, improve the reliability of comparisons between studies, and eliminate unwarranted etiological assumptions inherent in some of the descriptive terms presently used in the literature.
6. In search of consensus: Terminology for entheseal changes (EC)
- Author
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Villotte, S., Assis, S., Cardoso, F.A., Henderson, C.Y., Mariotti, V., Milella, M., Pany-Kucera, D., Speith, Nivien, Wilczak, C.A., Jurmain, R., Villotte, S., Assis, S., Cardoso, F.A., Henderson, C.Y., Mariotti, V., Milella, M., Pany-Kucera, D., Speith, Nivien, Wilczak, C.A., and Jurmain, R.
- Abstract
This article presents a consensus terminology for entheseal changes that was developed in English by an international team of scholars and then translated into French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and German. Use of a standard, neutral terminology to describe entheseal morphology will reduce misunderstandings between researchers, improve the reliability of comparisons between studies, and eliminate unwarranted etiological assumptions inherent in some of the descriptive terms presently used in the literature.
7. Dental wear and oral pathology among sex determined Early Bronze-Age children from Franzhausen I, Lower Austria.
- Author
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Bas M, Kurzmann C, Willman J, Pany-Kucera D, Rebay-Salisbury K, and Kanz F
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- Humans, Male, Child, Female, Austria, Pathology, Oral, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dental Caries, Tooth Wear pathology
- Abstract
The physical properties of diet and oral health throughout childhood play an important role in the development of human dentition, and differed greatly before the industrial revolution. In this study we examined dental wear and oral pathology in a sample of children from the Early Bronze-Age to investigate the physical and mechanical properties of childhood diet and related oral health. We explore cross-sectional age and sex-based variation of children in the sample. The analysis was carried out on the dentitions of 75 children, 978 teeth, excavated from the Early Bronze-Age cemetery Franzhausen I in Lower Austria. Presence of dental caries and calculus was recorded. Dental wear was measured using dentine exposure, occlusal topography, and dental microwear texture analysis. Sex determination was carried out using amelogenin peptide analysis. Caries were found in only 4 individuals (crude prevalence rate-5%, 95% CI 1% to 13%), affecting only 5 teeth (true prevalence rate-less than 1%). Dentine exposure was observed in over 70% of deciduous molars and dental wear measurements indicate a comparatively strong dental wear accumulation especially, among younger children, when compared to modern-day and later pre-industrial populations. Microwear textures presented a high complexity (Asfc > 2)/low anisotropy (epLsar < 1) profile, especially in older children. Differences between male and female children were not generally significant but increased dentine exposure was observed in the lower molars of younger female children. Our results suggest that the Early Bronze-Age children at Franzhausen I consumed a non-cariogenic diet, more abrasive and inclusive of harder/polyhedral foodstuffs than present-day children and some later Medieval children. Differences in dental wear accumulation were observed between children within the population, but with minimal variation between the sexes mostly occurring among younger children., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Bas et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. A rare case of calvarial tuberculosis from the Avar Age (8th century CE) cemetery of Kaba-Bitózug (Hajdú-Bihar county, Hungary) - Pathogenesis and differential diagnostic aspects.
- Author
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Spekker O, Váradi OA, Szekeres A, Jäger HY, Zink A, Berner M, Pany-Kucera D, Strondl L, Klostermann P, Samu L, Király K, Bereczki Z, Molnár E, Pálfi G, and Tihanyi B
- Subjects
- Cemeteries, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Humans, Hungary, Paleopathology methods, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular history
- Abstract
The aim of our paper is to present and discuss in detail the bony changes indicative of tuberculosis (TB) that were identified in a skeleton (KB67), unearthed from grave 67 of the 8th-century-CE cemetery of Kaba-Bitózug (Hungary). Furthermore, to provide the differential diagnoses of the observed alterations, with special attention to the cranial osteolytic lesions. During the macro- and micromorphological examinations of KB67, the skull revealed three small, well-circumscribed, punched-out osteolytic lesions accompanied by endocranial granular impressions, abnormal blood vessel impressions, periosteal appositions, and cortical erosion. The postcranial skeleton exhibited osteolytic lesions, cortical remodelling and erosion, and signs of hypervascularisation in the spine. Based on the differential diagnosis of the cranial osteolytic lesions and their co-occurrence with endocranial and vertebral bony changes indicative of TB, they most likely resulted from tuberculous involvement of the frontal and left parietal bones. The morphologically established diagnosis was confirmed by a PCR analysis that provided evidence for the presence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA in KB67. KB67, the first reported archaeological case with calvarial TB from the present-day territory of Hungary, gives us a unique insight into the occurrence of a rare manifestation of TB in the Avar Age of the Great Plain., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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9. Editorial - Pelvic features: an introduction.
- Author
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Pany-Kucera D and Rebay-Salisbury K
- Subjects
- Humans, Pelvis
- Published
- 2022
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10. Anatomic basics and technical approaches: sacral preauricular extensions, preauricular sulci and dorsal pubic pits in modern anatomical specimens.
- Author
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Maurer-Gesek B, Pany-Kucera D, Spannagl-Steiner M, Argeny S, Gruber J, Mueller C, Nedomansky J, Meng S, Maier A, and Weninger WJ
- Subjects
- Female, Human Body, Humans, Ligaments, Articular, Male, Sacroiliac Joint diagnostic imaging, Pubic Bone, Pubic Symphysis
- Abstract
The aim of this study is the evaluation of three selected osseous pelvic features in modern anatomical specimen - the sacral preauricular extension, the preauricular sulcus and pits on the dorsal side of the pubic bone laterally to the symphysis. The specificity and significance of these features are under debate and their genesis is largely unclear. Descriptive data of specific soft tissue structures surrounding the anterior sacroiliac joint gap and the pubic symphysis were generated by assessing 20 fresh pelves and 12 embalmed hemipelves from human body donors. Computed tomography (CT) was performed on all specimens and three-dimensional (3D) surface models were generated and analysed. Afterwards, all the specimens underwent anatomical dissection and finally maceration. During dissection, it became apparent that the anterior sacroiliac ligament, due to its position, shape and potential impact on the sacroiliac joint and adjacent osseous structures, requires a detailed analysis of its dimension. The most promising result, in terms of the sacral preauricular extension, was that the measurements of the triangular part of the anterior sacroiliac ligament were significantly longer in females than in males. Pelvic floor muscle fibres and fascial parts were directly connected to this ligament in some specimens, which is an important starting point for a larger in-depth study. The evaluation of the anatomic structures in connection to dorsal pitting refutes the assumption that the pelvic floor muscles or fasciae could exert influence on its formation. A histological evaluation of the ligaments of the pubic symphysis, especially the dorsal pubic ligament, would be expedient to clarify the etiology of this feature.
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- 2022
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11. Sacral preauricular extensions and notches as parts of a 'Pelvic Pattern' may provide information on past pregnancies and parturitions.
- Author
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Pany-Kucera D, Spannagl-Steiner M, Maurer-Gesek B, Weninger WJ, and Rebay-Salisbury K
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Parity, Pelvis, Pregnancy, Pubic Bone, Parturition, Pelvic Bones
- Abstract
During the analyses of several hundred prehistoric individuals from Austria, we observed that some women display a "Pelvic Pattern" at the innominate bones and the sacrum, i.e. specific combinations of pronounced expressions of pelvic features. We recorded classic pelvic features (dorsal pubic pitting, preauricular sulcus, extended pubic tubercle) as well as new ones (SPE: sacral preauricular extension, a ventrally pointing flat bone formation at the ventrosuperior margin of the ala ossis sacri; SPN: sacral preauricular notch, a loss of convexity at the same location; CF: corresponding facets at the ilium), and some less well-known features, i.e. the margo auricularis groove, ventral pubic exostoses and lesions. To quantify the assessed features, we developed a specific formula to calculate the 'Pelvic Pattern Index' (PPI). As pregnancies and/or parturitions are suspected to contribute to or be at least partly causative of the occurrence of pelvic features, we analyzed 48 well-preserved female individuals and 15 males from identified skeletal collections with obstetric information in Geneva and London. In these collections, we found a pelvic pattern of at least four out of ten distinctly expressed pelvic features only in multiparous females, but not in nulli- or primiparous females or in males. This pattern was found in 40.6% of the multiparous females and 29.2% of all females from the identified collections, compared to 56.1% of well-preserved prehistoric females with unknown parity status from Austria (n = 41). The mean PPI of the multiparae from the identified collections is 0.25, compared to a mean PPI of 0.19 for all women from the identified collections, and 0.28 for the prehistoric female individuals. We conclude from this that a high PPI (≥ 0.30), especially in cases where SPE or SPN are present, can give insights into past motherhood.
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- 2022
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12. Indicators of motherhood? Sacral preauricular extensions and notches in identified skeletal collections.
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Pany-Kucera D, Spannagl-Steiner M, Desideri J, and Rebay-Salisbury K
- Abstract
The sacral preauricular extension (SPE) and sacral preauricular notch (SPN) are morphological changes at the ventral apex of the sacrum. We recently specified their shapes and appearances and suggested a scoring system based on prehistoric Austrian skeletal assemblages. We hypothesized that these specific pelvic changes relate to past pregnancies and parturitions, a hypothesis that we now tested on a subsample of individuals from the Simon Identified Skeletal collection in Geneva ( n = 62) and the Christ Church, Spitalfields collection in London ( n = 27) linked to historical information on deliveries. We found SPE and SPN in low frequencies and only in female individuals with at least two children in both collections, and a significant association between the emergence of SPE and first births by 25 years. SPN was found only in two females in the Simon collection, but both with a very high number of recorded parturitions including twin births. Based on these results, we are confident in our assumption that at least SPE, and possibly also SPN, result from increased compression forces at the sacroiliac joint, and especially at the ventrosuperior margin, in recurring (complicated) birth events, the interaction of enhanced pelvic joint mobility that is highest up to age 25, and postural changes related to weight gain during pregnancy. Pelvic shape, dimensions, body proportions, biomechanical issues and hormonal levels may also play a role in their emergence., (© 2021 The Authors. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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13. Challenging definitions and diagnostic approaches for ancient rare diseases: The case of poliomyelitis.
- Author
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Berner M, Pany-Kucera D, Doneus N, Sladek V, Gamble M, and Eggers S
- Subjects
- Adult, Austria, Humans, Male, Paralysis, Poliomyelitis diagnosis, Rare Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: This paper aims to contribute to the definition of ancient rare diseases in skeletons displaying pathologies associated with paralysis. It uses a new suite of methods, which can be applied to challenging cases of possible paralysis in archaeologically-derived human skeletal material, specifically applied to the identification of poliomyelitis., Materials: An adult male skeleton from Roman Halbturn, Austria., Methods: Morphological and entheseal change analyses, CT scans, X-rays, cross-section morphology, and histology, alongside modern clinical, as well as historic, literature were used to discuss paralyses., Results: The results suggest a diagnosis of poliomyelitis; now considered a rare disease, but perhaps ubiquitous in antiquity, thus complicating the definition of 'rare disease'., Conclusions: The integrated methodological procedures employed for this case constitutes a replicable and thorough approach to diagnosis, and explores the nature of ancient rare diseases. Due to the socio-environmental aspects of poliomyelitis transmission, it is likely that polio was likely not rare in the past. Therefore, the definition of 'rare diseases in the past' must include rarely occurring rarely diagnosed diseases due to biases and challenges within the archaeological and environmental record., Significance: The developed suite of methods has not been applied to establish a diagnosis of polio in the past., Limitations: The individual considered in this study is fairly well-preserved; thus, this set of analyses may not be applicable to all remains where preservation is poor or highly fragmentary, and the discussion of rare diseases requires relatively secure diagnoses and context., Suggestions for Further Research: Large collections and series of skeletal human remains are recommended to develop definitive conclusions., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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14. The association of parturition scars and pelvic shape: A geometric morphometric study.
- Author
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Waltenberger L, Pany-Kucera D, Rebay-Salisbury K, and Mitteroecker P
- Subjects
- Acetabulum pathology, Anthropology, Physical, Female, History, 19th Century, History, Ancient, Humans, Labor, Obstetric history, Male, Pregnancy, Parturition, Pelvic Bones pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: Pelvic features, mostly known as parturition scars, have been extensively studied in the last decades and are frequently investigated in archaeological and forensic contexts. It is still unclear, however, whether they really relate to pregnancy and birth, or whether these features are caused by other biomechanical factors. Because the length and difficulty of labor correlates with the form of the birth canal, we studied the association between the expression of pelvic features and pelvic shape using geometric morphometrics., Materials and Methods: We scored the expression of the preauricular sulcus, margo auricularis groove, sacral preauricular extension, dorsal and ventral pubic pitting for 54 individuals from a 19th century collection and 19 individuals from the Bronze Age cemetery of Hainburg-Teichtal, Austria. Based on photogrammetric surface models, pelvic shape was captured by 331 landmarks and semilandmarks. The multivariate association between pelvic features and pelvic shape was explored by partial least squares analysis., Results: Within the female subsample, we detected a significant association of a constrained birth canal with a strong expression of the preauricular sulcus, the margo auricularis groove, and a retroverted position of the acetabulum. No significant association was found among males., Discussion: This suggests that difficult or prolonged labor may indeed cause more strongly expressed pelvic features, presumably because of increased strain of the pelvic ligaments during birth. Furthermore, the retroversion of the acetabulum, which is known to cause sacroiliac joint dysfunction, changes the strain on pelvic ligaments and can thus also result in the development of pronounced pelvic features., (© 2020 The Authors. American Journal of Physical Anthropology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
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15. Child murder in the Early Bronze Age: proteomic sex identification of a cold case from Schleinbach, Austria.
- Author
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Rebay-Salisbury K, Janker L, Pany-Kucera D, Schuster D, Spannagl-Steiner M, Waltenberger L, Salisbury RB, and Kanz F
- Abstract
The identification of sex-specific peptides in human tooth enamel by nanoflow liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (nanoLC-MS/MS) represents a quantum leap for the study of childhood and social relations more generally. Determining sex-related differences in prehistoric child rearing and mortality has been hampered by the insufficient accuracy in determining the biological sex of juveniles. We conducted mass spectrometric analysis to identify sex-specific peptides in the dental enamel of a child from a settlement pit of the Early Bronze Age settlement of Schleinbach, Austria (c. 1950-1850 bc). Four perimortal impression fractures on the skull of a 5-6-year-old child indicate an intentional killing, with a co-buried loom weight as possible murder weapon. Proteomic analysis, conducted for the first time on prehistoric teeth in Austria, determined the child's sex as male. While we cannot conclusively determine whether the child was the victim of conflicts between village groups or was slain by members of his own community, we suggest that contextual evidence points to the latter. A possible trigger of violence was the follow-on effects of an uncontrolled middle ear infection revealed by an osteological analysis. The boy from Schleinbach highlights the potential for further investigation of gender-biased violence, infanticide and child murder based on the recently developed method of proteomic sex identification., (© The Author(s) 2020.)
- Published
- 2020
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16. In search of consensus: Terminology for entheseal changes (EC).
- Author
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Villotte S, Assis S, Cardoso FA, Henderson CY, Mariotti V, Milella M, Pany-Kucera D, Speith N, Wilczak CA, and Jurmain R
- Abstract
This article presents a consensus terminology for entheseal changes that was developed in English by an international team of scholars and then translated into French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and German. Use of a standard, neutral terminology to describe entheseal morphology will reduce misunderstandings between researchers, improve the reliability of comparisons between studies, and eliminate unwarranted etiological assumptions inherent in some of the descriptive terms presently used in the literature., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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