Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females

Recent research has indicated a dramatic acceleration of dental development in 20th century European Americans in Tennessee and Arizona, resulting in developmental stages being reached at earlier calendar ages. In order to determine whether this rate change is also observed in New Mexico, radiograph...

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Main Authors: Anna L. M. Rautman, Heather J. H. Edgar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dental Anthropology Association 2013-11-01
Series:Dental Anthropology
Online Access:http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/49/29
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spelling doaj-a4309e79147c4989aa0d45b1b8000def2021-08-21T13:13:37ZengDental Anthropology AssociationDental Anthropology1096-94112013-11-012633137https://doi.org/10.26575/daj.v26i3.49Secular change in dental development in New Mexican femalesAnna L. M. Rautman0Heather J. H. Edgar1Department of Anthropology and Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New MexicoDepartment of Anthropology and Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New MexicoRecent research has indicated a dramatic acceleration of dental development in 20th century European Americans in Tennessee and Arizona, resulting in developmental stages being reached at earlier calendar ages. In order to determine whether this rate change is also observed in New Mexico, radiographs from two cohorts of European American female orthodontic patients with known ages were used to compare age by stage of development. The cohorts date to the 1970's (n=101) and the 1990's (n=93) and were between 5-11 years of age. Dental developmental stages were recorded for five mandibular teeth. The average calendar age difference between cohorts per tooth and developmental stage combination was less than one month, but varies among tooth/stage combinations by up to 13 months. A Pearson's chi square test found no significant difference between the two cohorts for the 22 tooth/stage combinations. However, Cox Hazards Analysis demonstrated significant differences between the cohorts for five of the 22 tooth and stage combinations. Contrary to previous findings, the calendar age of the 1990's cohort is older for 16 of the 22 tooth/stage combinations than the 1970's cohort. This runs counter to the general trend of acceleration in development observed in multiple systems.http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/49/29
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna L. M. Rautman
Heather J. H. Edgar
spellingShingle Anna L. M. Rautman
Heather J. H. Edgar
Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
Dental Anthropology
author_facet Anna L. M. Rautman
Heather J. H. Edgar
author_sort Anna L. M. Rautman
title Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
title_short Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
title_full Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
title_fullStr Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
title_full_unstemmed Secular change in dental development in New Mexican females
title_sort secular change in dental development in new mexican females
publisher Dental Anthropology Association
series Dental Anthropology
issn 1096-9411
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Recent research has indicated a dramatic acceleration of dental development in 20th century European Americans in Tennessee and Arizona, resulting in developmental stages being reached at earlier calendar ages. In order to determine whether this rate change is also observed in New Mexico, radiographs from two cohorts of European American female orthodontic patients with known ages were used to compare age by stage of development. The cohorts date to the 1970's (n=101) and the 1990's (n=93) and were between 5-11 years of age. Dental developmental stages were recorded for five mandibular teeth. The average calendar age difference between cohorts per tooth and developmental stage combination was less than one month, but varies among tooth/stage combinations by up to 13 months. A Pearson's chi square test found no significant difference between the two cohorts for the 22 tooth/stage combinations. However, Cox Hazards Analysis demonstrated significant differences between the cohorts for five of the 22 tooth and stage combinations. Contrary to previous findings, the calendar age of the 1990's cohort is older for 16 of the 22 tooth/stage combinations than the 1970's cohort. This runs counter to the general trend of acceleration in development observed in multiple systems.
url http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/49/29
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