Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology

Healthy periodontal tissues are essential to maintaining attachment, stability, and retention of teeth. The concept of ‘health’ is problematic however and includes both physical and psycho-social characteristics. The challenge for bioarchaeologists is defining what physical expression begins to affe...

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Main Authors: Alexandra Tuggle, James Watson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dental Anthropology Association 2019-07-01
Series:Dental Anthropology
Online Access:http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/289/274
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spelling doaj-9ce6584bae36482999827095dc659e842021-08-14T04:04:49ZengDental Anthropology AssociationDental Anthropology1096-94112019-07-013221221https://doi.org/10.26575/daj.v32i2.289Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeologyAlexandra Tuggle0James Watson1Department of Anthropology, The Ohio State UniversityArizona State Museum, University of Arizona; School of Anthropology, University of ArizonaHealthy periodontal tissues are essential to maintaining attachment, stability, and retention of teeth. The concept of ‘health’ is problematic however and includes both physical and psycho-social characteristics. The challenge for bioarchaeologists is defining what physical expression begins to affect an individual’s well-being. Here we apply a lifecourse approach to the measurement of periodontal tissue depth (CEJ-AC) at M1 in a prehistoric sample (N = 162) from the American Southwest to test the hypothesis that age and sex differences bear the greatest impact on the expression of periodontitis. CEJ-AC at M1 increased significantly (p<.001) across age stages from 1.5 ±0.5mm (15-20yo) to 4.25 ±0.25mm in the old age group (40-50yo). Occlusal surface wear and alveolar crest (AC) resorption were considerably variable (non-significant) between sexes; however, tooth loss at M1 is more than double among females compared to males in the final decades 40-50yo and 50-60yo. Results support the hypothesis that periodontal tissue loss differentially affects females across the lifecourse. Bacterial infection, chronic gingivitis, and bony resorption cause the physical symptoms of periodontal disease but may not be accompanied by pain or altered functionality. The outcome of the disease process is tooth loss, which can affect functionality and quality of life. Periodontal ‘health’ is therefore best interpreted in bioarchaeological samples around the point that alveolar recession results in tooth loss and altered functionality.http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/289/274
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra Tuggle
James Watson
spellingShingle Alexandra Tuggle
James Watson
Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
Dental Anthropology
author_facet Alexandra Tuggle
James Watson
author_sort Alexandra Tuggle
title Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
title_short Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
title_full Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
title_fullStr Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
title_full_unstemmed Periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
title_sort periodontal health and the lifecourse approach in bioarchaeology
publisher Dental Anthropology Association
series Dental Anthropology
issn 1096-9411
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Healthy periodontal tissues are essential to maintaining attachment, stability, and retention of teeth. The concept of ‘health’ is problematic however and includes both physical and psycho-social characteristics. The challenge for bioarchaeologists is defining what physical expression begins to affect an individual’s well-being. Here we apply a lifecourse approach to the measurement of periodontal tissue depth (CEJ-AC) at M1 in a prehistoric sample (N = 162) from the American Southwest to test the hypothesis that age and sex differences bear the greatest impact on the expression of periodontitis. CEJ-AC at M1 increased significantly (p<.001) across age stages from 1.5 ±0.5mm (15-20yo) to 4.25 ±0.25mm in the old age group (40-50yo). Occlusal surface wear and alveolar crest (AC) resorption were considerably variable (non-significant) between sexes; however, tooth loss at M1 is more than double among females compared to males in the final decades 40-50yo and 50-60yo. Results support the hypothesis that periodontal tissue loss differentially affects females across the lifecourse. Bacterial infection, chronic gingivitis, and bony resorption cause the physical symptoms of periodontal disease but may not be accompanied by pain or altered functionality. The outcome of the disease process is tooth loss, which can affect functionality and quality of life. Periodontal ‘health’ is therefore best interpreted in bioarchaeological samples around the point that alveolar recession results in tooth loss and altered functionality.
url http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/289/274
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