What skeletons tell us. The story of human paleopathology.
Identifieur interne : 000578 ( Main/Merge ); précédent : 000577; suivant : 000579What skeletons tell us. The story of human paleopathology.
Auteurs : Donald J. Ortner [États-Unis]Source :
- Virchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology [ 1432-2307 ] ; 2011.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Bone Diseases (history), Bone Diseases (microbiology), Bone Diseases (parasitology), Bone Diseases (pathology), Bone and Bones (microbiology), Bone and Bones (parasitology), Bone and Bones (pathology), Echinococcosis (history), History, 19th Century, Humans, Leprosy (history), Mycobacterium Infections (history), Paleopathology (history), Syphilis (history), Treponemal Infections (history), Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular (history).
- MESH :
- history : Bone Diseases, Echinococcosis, Leprosy, Mycobacterium Infections, Paleopathology, Syphilis, Treponemal Infections, Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular.
- microbiology : Bone Diseases, Bone and Bones.
- parasitology : Bone Diseases, Bone and Bones.
- pathology : Bone Diseases, Bone and Bones.
- History, 19th Century, Humans.
Abstract
Human skeletal paleopathology provides important insight regarding the antiquity of some diseases and their distribution in past human groups. The history of human skeletal paleopathology extends back more than 150 years. Rudolf Virchow published reports on the subject, and research on paleopathology has provided critical data on important topics such as the origin of syphilis. With the development of powerful new research tools, human paleopathology will continue to be a source of data on the development of disease and its effect on human biological and cultural development.
DOI: 10.1007/s00428-011-1122-x
PubMed: 21779895
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pubmed:21779895Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Human skeletal paleopathology provides important insight regarding the antiquity of some diseases and their distribution in past human groups. The history of human skeletal paleopathology extends back more than 150 years. Rudolf Virchow published reports on the subject, and research on paleopathology has provided critical data on important topics such as the origin of syphilis. With the development of powerful new research tools, human paleopathology will continue to be a source of data on the development of disease and its effect on human biological and cultural development.</div>
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