Neoplasm or not? General principles of morphologic analysis of dry bone specimens
Unlike modern diagnosticians, a paleopathologist will likely have only skeletonized human remains without medical records, radiologic studies over time, microbiologic culture results, etc. Macroscopic and radiologic analyses are usually the most accessible diagnostic methods for the study of ancient...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of paleopathology 2018-06, Vol.21, p.27-40 |
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container_title | International journal of paleopathology |
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creator | Ragsdale, Bruce D Campbell, Roselyn A Kirkpatrick, Casey L |
description | Unlike modern diagnosticians, a paleopathologist will likely have only skeletonized human remains without medical records, radiologic studies over time, microbiologic culture results, etc. Macroscopic and radiologic analyses are usually the most accessible diagnostic methods for the study of ancient skeletal remains. This paper recommends an organized approach to the study of dry bone specimens with reference to specimen radiographs. For circumscribed lesions, the distribution (solitary vs. multifocal), character of margins, details of periosteal reactions, and remnants of mineralized matrix should point to the mechanism(s) producing the bony changes. In turn, this allows selecting a likely category of disease (e.g. neoplastic) within which a differential diagnosis can be elaborated and from which a favored specific diagnosis can be chosen. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.ijpp.2017.02.002 |
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subjects | Bone and Bones - diagnostic imaging Bone and Bones - pathology Bone Diseases - diagnostic imaging Bone Diseases - history Bone Diseases - pathology Bone Neoplasms - diagnostic imaging Bone Neoplasms - history Bone Neoplasms - pathology Diagnosis, Differential Fossils - diagnostic imaging Fossils - history Fossils - pathology History, Ancient Humans Paleopathology - methods |
title | Neoplasm or not? General principles of morphologic analysis of dry bone specimens |
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