Paleoepidemiology of cribra orbitalia: Insights from early seventh millennium BP Con Co Ngua, Vietnam

Author:

Wang Tianyi1,McFadden Clare2ORCID,Buckley Hallie3ORCID,Domett Kate4ORCID,Willis Anna5ORCID,Trinh Hiep H.6ORCID,Matsumura Hirofumi7ORCID,Vlok Melandri8ORCID,Oxenham Marc F.29ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Archaeology University of Cambridge The Henry Wellcome Building, Fitzwilliam Street Cambridge CB2 1QH UK

2. School of Archaeology and Anthropology Australian National University 44 Linnaeus Way Canberra Australian Capital Territory 2601 Australia

3. Department of Anatomy, School of Biomedical Sciences University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

4. College of Medicine and Dentistry James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

5. College of Arts, Society & Education James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

6. Institute of Archaeology Hanoi Vietnam

7. School of Health Sciences Sapporo Medical University Sapporo Japan

8. Southeast Asia Centre University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

9. Department of Archaeology, School of Geosciences University of Aberdeen St Mary's, Elphinstone Road Aberdeen AB24 3UF Scotland UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesWe test the hypothesis that the condition(s) leading to the development of cribra orbitalia at Con Co Ngua, an early seventh millennium sedentary foraging community in Vietnam, effectively reduced the resilience of the population to subsequent health/disease impacts. An assessment of both the implications and potential etiology of cribra orbitalia in this specific population is carried out.MethodsThe effective sample included 141 adults aged ≥15 years (53 females, 71 males, and 17 unknown sex) and 15 pre‐adults aged ≤14 years. Cribra orbitalia was identified by way of cortical bone porosity of the orbital roof initiated within the diplöic space, rather than initiated subperiosteally. The approach is also robust to the misidentification of various pseudo‐lesions. Resultant data was analyzed using Kaplan–Meier survival analysis.ResultsMedian survival is higher in adults aged ≥15 years without cribra orbitalia than those with this lesion. For the pre‐adult cohort, the opposite pattern is seen where median survival is higher in those with cribra orbitalia than those without.ConclusionAdults displayed increased frailty and pre‐adults increased resilience with respect to cribra orbitalia. The differential diagnosis for a survival analysis of adults and pre‐adults with and without cribra orbitalia included iron deficiency anemia and B12/folate deficiency, parasitism (including hydatid disease and malaria) in addition to thalassemia. The most parsimonious explanation for observed results is for both thalassemia and malaria being the chief etiological agents, while appreciating these conditions interact with, and can cause, other forms such as hematinic deficiency anemias.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology,Archeology,Genetics,Anthropology,Anatomy,Epidemiology

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