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Congenital Syphilis in the Archaeological Record: Diagnostic Insensitivity of Osseous Lesions

✍ Scribed by BRUCE M. ROTHSCHILD; CHRISTINE ROTHSCHILD


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
70 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
1047-482X

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✦ Synopsis


The paucity of convincing evidence for congenital bone lesions of syphilis in the archaeological record led to study of the human remains from the Buffalo site in West Virginia, dated at 550±650 years BP. The diagnosis of syphilis (venereal) in adults was based on previously validated population criteria for the recognition of syphilis and its distinction from among the other treponemal diseases. Among the 151 juveniles (23.3 per cent of the total series), only one had macroscopic evidence of periosteal disease. The low frequency of recognizable osseous stigmata characteristic of congenital syphilis, combined with the conspicuous absence of pathognomonic dental lesions, make such periosteal lesions insuf®ciently sensitive criteria for the identi®cation of syphilis in the archaeological record.