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A skeletal case of hypertrophic osteoarthropathy from the Canary Islands dating from 1000 BP

Authors

Gonzalez-Reimers, Emilio , TRUJILLO MEDEROS, AIOZE RAFA, Machado-Calvo, Manuel , Castaneyra-Ruiz, Maria , Ordonez, Alejandra C. , Arnay-de-la-Rosa, Matilde

External publication

No

Means

Int. J. Paleopathol.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

0.788

SJR Impact

0.556

Publication date

01/12/2015

ISI

000366080900001

Abstract

A left tibia, the distal right tibia, and the proximal four fifths of the right ulna and radius, probably belonging to an adult prehispanic man (antiquity of approximate to 1000 years BP) were found among commingled bone remains in a collective burial cave of the island of El Hierro, in the Canary Archipelago. All four bones show an intense periosteal bone formation, encrusting the preserved cortical bone of the diaphyses. Differential diagnosis include melorheostosis, syphilis, arid leprosy, although the most likely diagnosis is hypertrophic osteoarthropathy, which is usually associated with lung neoplasm or non-malignant diseases leading to chronic hypoxemia. The marked bone proliferation, possibly due to a chronic condition, suggests that possibly the underlying illness was a non-malignant one. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords

Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy; Periostitis; Paleopathology; Canary Islands-Prehispanic population

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