2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2018.09.007
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Co-morbidity with hypertrophic osteoarthropathy: A possible Iron Age Sarmatian case from the Volga steppe of Russia

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…As Fennel and Trinkaus established, the bilateral periostitis present on the femurs and tibiae of LF1 is consistent with HOA [ 7 ]. Researchers have used similar radiological techniques to identify HOA-afflicted human remains from 1970 [ 9 ], medieval England [ 10 ], the Canary Islands roughly a millennium old [ 11 ], and Iron Age civilization [ 12 ]. While it is impossible to fully determine the diagnosis of secondary HOA, given that LF1 displays no soft tissue preservation, it appears highly likely that LF1 did experience this syndrome from an underlying pathology, theorized by Fennel and Trinkaus to be either a thoracic infection or a carcinoma [ 7 ].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Fennel and Trinkaus established, the bilateral periostitis present on the femurs and tibiae of LF1 is consistent with HOA [ 7 ]. Researchers have used similar radiological techniques to identify HOA-afflicted human remains from 1970 [ 9 ], medieval England [ 10 ], the Canary Islands roughly a millennium old [ 11 ], and Iron Age civilization [ 12 ]. While it is impossible to fully determine the diagnosis of secondary HOA, given that LF1 displays no soft tissue preservation, it appears highly likely that LF1 did experience this syndrome from an underlying pathology, theorized by Fennel and Trinkaus to be either a thoracic infection or a carcinoma [ 7 ].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%