The rarest among the rare? Acrometastases and disability in the past and beyond

Author:

Antunes‐Ferreira Nathalie12ORCID,Curate Francisco3ORCID,Prates Carlos4,Bertrand Benoit56ORCID,Marques Carina37ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Egas Moniz Center for Interdisciplinarity Research Egas Moniz School of Health & Science Monte da Caparica Portugal

2. LCFPEM ‐ Laboratório de Ciências Forenses e Psicológicas Egas Moniz Egas Moniz School of Health & Science Monte da Caparica Portugal

3. Research Centre for Anthropology and Health, Department of Life Sciences, Faculty of Sciences and Technology University of Coimbra Coimbra Portugal

4. IMI‐art/Affidea Portugal Lisbon Portugal

5. Univ. Lille, CHU Lille, ULR 7367 ‐ UTML&A ‐ Unité de Taphonomie Médico‐Légale et d'Anatomie Lille France

6. Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Département Homme et Environnement, UMR 7194 HNHP Institut de Paléontologie Humaine Paris France

7. Department of Anthropology and School of Integrative Biological and Chemical Sciences The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Edinburg Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractMetastatic bone disease significantly impacts cancer‐related morbidity and mortality nowadays. Herein, we present an adult individual, probably a female, with multiple osteolytic lesions, of variable sizes, distributed predominantly in the axial skeleton but also affecting elements of the appendicular region. This individual also exhibits atypical manifestations of metastatic bone disease, in the form of acrometastases—metastases in the extremities, which are uncommon events in current clinical settings. The individual's skeletonized remains were exhumed from a crypt in the Chapel of the Holy Spirit (Espírito Santo), Loures, Portugal, and have been dated from the 16th to 19th centuries. The multiple osteolytic lesions, noted both by direct and radiological observations, are discussed to expand the knowledge regarding disease manifestations in the past but also to reflect on disability and suffering in past individuals affected by oncologic ailments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology

Reference35 articles.

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