Record-Breaking Pain: The Largest Number and Variety of Forelimb Bone Maladies in a Theropod Dinosaur

Bone abnormalities are common in theropod dinosaur skeletons, but before now no specimen was known with more than four afflicted bones of the pectoral girdle and/or forelimb. Here we describe the pathology of a specimen of the theropod dinosaur Dilophosaurus wetherilli with eight afflicted bones of...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2016-02, Vol.11 (2), p.e0149140-e0149140
Hauptverfasser: Senter, Phil, Juengst, Sara L
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description Bone abnormalities are common in theropod dinosaur skeletons, but before now no specimen was known with more than four afflicted bones of the pectoral girdle and/or forelimb. Here we describe the pathology of a specimen of the theropod dinosaur Dilophosaurus wetherilli with eight afflicted bones of the pectoral girdle and forelimb. On its left side the animal has a fractured scapula and radius and large fibriscesses in the ulna and the proximal thumb phalanx. On its right side the animal has abnormal torsion of the humeral shaft, bony tumors on the radius, a truncated distal articular surface of metacarpal III, and angular deformities of the first phalanx of the third finger. Healing and remodeling indicates that the animal survived for months and possibly years after its ailments began, but its right third finger was permanently deformed and lacked the capability of flexion. The deformities of the humerus and the right third finger may be due to developmental osteodysplasia, a condition known in extant birds but unreported in non-avian dinosaurs before now.
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Here we describe the pathology of a specimen of the theropod dinosaur Dilophosaurus wetherilli with eight afflicted bones of the pectoral girdle and forelimb. On its left side the animal has a fractured scapula and radius and large fibriscesses in the ulna and the proximal thumb phalanx. On its right side the animal has abnormal torsion of the humeral shaft, bony tumors on the radius, a truncated distal articular surface of metacarpal III, and angular deformities of the first phalanx of the third finger. Healing and remodeling indicates that the animal survived for months and possibly years after its ailments began, but its right third finger was permanently deformed and lacked the capability of flexion. 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subjects Abnormalities
Analysis
Animals
Archaeology
Biocompatibility
Biodiversity
Biology and Life Sciences
Biomedical materials
Birds
Bone Diseases - pathology
Bone dysplasia
Bones
Dilophosaurus
Dinosaurs
Disease
Earth Sciences
Extinct species
Finger
Forelimb - pathology
Fossils
Fractures
Humerus
Medicine
Medicine and Health Sciences
Metacarpal
Museum exhibits
Museums
Pain
Physical Sciences
Physiological aspects
Radius
Reptiles & amphibians
Scapula
Skeleton
Surgery
Theropoda
Tumors
Ulna
Violence
title Record-Breaking Pain: The Largest Number and Variety of Forelimb Bone Maladies in a Theropod Dinosaur
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