Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD. / Fejerskov, Ole; Bilde, P. Guldager; Bizzarro, Martin; Connelly, James; Thomsen, J. Skovhus; Nyvad, Bente.

In: Caries Research, Vol. 46, No. 5, 01.08.2012, p. 467-473.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fejerskov, O, Bilde, PG, Bizzarro, M, Connelly, J, Thomsen, JS & Nyvad, B 2012, 'Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD', Caries Research, vol. 46, no. 5, pp. 467-473. https://doi.org/10.1159/000339664

APA

Fejerskov, O., Bilde, P. G., Bizzarro, M., Connelly, J., Thomsen, J. S., & Nyvad, B. (2012). Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD. Caries Research, 46(5), 467-473. https://doi.org/10.1159/000339664

Vancouver

Fejerskov O, Bilde PG, Bizzarro M, Connelly J, Thomsen JS, Nyvad B. Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD. Caries Research. 2012 Aug 1;46(5):467-473. https://doi.org/10.1159/000339664

Author

Fejerskov, Ole ; Bilde, P. Guldager ; Bizzarro, Martin ; Connelly, James ; Thomsen, J. Skovhus ; Nyvad, Bente. / Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD. In: Caries Research. 2012 ; Vol. 46, No. 5. pp. 467-473.

Bibtex

@article{608ad002d84942abbd28182ce2602fa4,
title = "Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD",
abstract = "Scarce information exists on the clinical features of dental caries in the Imperial Roman population and no structural data on caries lesions from this period have so far been published. We report on the findings of 86 teeth (50-100 AD) found during archaeological excavations of the temple of Castor and Pollux in the Forum Romanum. We found that nearly all teeth had large carious cavities extending into the pulp. The distribution and size of the caries lesions were similar to those found in contemporary adult populations in Africa and China living without access to dental care. Most lesions had a hypermineralized zone in the dentin at the advancing front of the carious cavities as revealed by micro-computed tomography. This biological dentin reaction combined with the morphology of the cavities might indicate that some temporary topical pain relief and intervention treatment slowed down the rate of lesion progression. This is indirectly supported by examination of cavities of similar size and depth from a contemporary population without access to dental health care. In contrast to the lesions in the Roman teeth, these lesions did not exhibit a hypermineralized dentin reaction. We investigated whether the Pb isotopic composition of enamel and/or dentin of a single tooth matched that of a sample of an ancient Forum water lead pipe. The Pb isotopic composition of the tooth did not match that of the tube, suggesting that the subjects were exposed to different Pb sources during their lifetime other than the lead tubes.",
author = "Ole Fejerskov and Bilde, {P. Guldager} and Martin Bizzarro and James Connelly and Thomsen, {J. Skovhus} and Bente Nyvad",
year = "2012",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1159/000339664",
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "467--473",
journal = "Caries Research",
issn = "0008-6568",
publisher = "S Karger AG",
number = "5",

}

RIS

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T1 - Dental caries in Rome, 50-100 AD

AU - Fejerskov, Ole

AU - Bilde, P. Guldager

AU - Bizzarro, Martin

AU - Connelly, James

AU - Thomsen, J. Skovhus

AU - Nyvad, Bente

PY - 2012/8/1

Y1 - 2012/8/1

N2 - Scarce information exists on the clinical features of dental caries in the Imperial Roman population and no structural data on caries lesions from this period have so far been published. We report on the findings of 86 teeth (50-100 AD) found during archaeological excavations of the temple of Castor and Pollux in the Forum Romanum. We found that nearly all teeth had large carious cavities extending into the pulp. The distribution and size of the caries lesions were similar to those found in contemporary adult populations in Africa and China living without access to dental care. Most lesions had a hypermineralized zone in the dentin at the advancing front of the carious cavities as revealed by micro-computed tomography. This biological dentin reaction combined with the morphology of the cavities might indicate that some temporary topical pain relief and intervention treatment slowed down the rate of lesion progression. This is indirectly supported by examination of cavities of similar size and depth from a contemporary population without access to dental health care. In contrast to the lesions in the Roman teeth, these lesions did not exhibit a hypermineralized dentin reaction. We investigated whether the Pb isotopic composition of enamel and/or dentin of a single tooth matched that of a sample of an ancient Forum water lead pipe. The Pb isotopic composition of the tooth did not match that of the tube, suggesting that the subjects were exposed to different Pb sources during their lifetime other than the lead tubes.

AB - Scarce information exists on the clinical features of dental caries in the Imperial Roman population and no structural data on caries lesions from this period have so far been published. We report on the findings of 86 teeth (50-100 AD) found during archaeological excavations of the temple of Castor and Pollux in the Forum Romanum. We found that nearly all teeth had large carious cavities extending into the pulp. The distribution and size of the caries lesions were similar to those found in contemporary adult populations in Africa and China living without access to dental care. Most lesions had a hypermineralized zone in the dentin at the advancing front of the carious cavities as revealed by micro-computed tomography. This biological dentin reaction combined with the morphology of the cavities might indicate that some temporary topical pain relief and intervention treatment slowed down the rate of lesion progression. This is indirectly supported by examination of cavities of similar size and depth from a contemporary population without access to dental health care. In contrast to the lesions in the Roman teeth, these lesions did not exhibit a hypermineralized dentin reaction. We investigated whether the Pb isotopic composition of enamel and/or dentin of a single tooth matched that of a sample of an ancient Forum water lead pipe. The Pb isotopic composition of the tooth did not match that of the tube, suggesting that the subjects were exposed to different Pb sources during their lifetime other than the lead tubes.

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