Linear enamel hypoplasias as indicators of systemic physiological stress: evidence from two known age-at-death and sex populations from postmedieval London.
@article{King2005LinearEH,
title={Linear enamel hypoplasias as indicators of systemic physiological stress: evidence from two known age-at-death and sex populations from postmedieval London.},
author={Tania King and Louise T. Humphrey and Simon Hillson},
journal={American journal of physical anthropology},
year={2005},
volume={128 3},
pages={
547-59
}
}Enamel hypoplasias are useful indicators of systemic growth disturbances during childhood, and are routinely used to investigate patterns of morbidity and mortality in past populations. This study examined the pattern of linear enamel hypoplasias in two different burial populations from 18th and 19th Century church crypts in London. Linear enamel hypoplasias on the permanent dentitions of individuals from the crypt of Christ Church, Spitalfields, were compared to enamel defects on the teeth of…
187 Citations
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The retrospective analysis of stress episodes in early childhood revealed the increased frequency of factors disturbing ameloblast metabolism, mainly in the post-weaning period, which indicated that the mean age of enamel hypoplasia occurrence was at over 3 years.
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