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1.
Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis ; 41(11): 1295-1304, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36114431

ABSTRACT

To establish a biological profile and disease aetiologies for one of four burials recovered during a Time Team dig at the St. Mary Magdalen leprosarium, Winchester, UK in AD 2000. Osteological techniques were applied to estimate age at death, biological sex, stature and pathology. Visual assessment of the material was supplemented by radiographic examination. Evidence for leprosy DNA was sought using ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis. The remains are those of a male individual excavated from a west-east aligned grave. The skeleton shows signs of two pathologies. Remodelling of the rhino-maxillary area and degenerative changes to small bones of the feet and reactive bone on the distal lower limbs suggest a multibacillary form of leprosy, whereas the right tibia and fibula show the presence of a primary neoplasm identified as an osteosarcoma. The aDNA study confirmed presence of Mycobacterium leprae in several skeletal elements, and the strain was genotyped to the 3I lineage, one of two main SNP types present in mediaeval Britain and ancestral to extant strains in America. This is a rare documentation of leprosy in association with a primary neoplasm.


Subject(s)
Leprosy, Lepromatous , Leprosy , Osteosarcoma , Bone and Bones , DNA, Ancient , Humans , Leprosy/diagnosis , Leprosy, Lepromatous/microbiology , Male , Mycobacterium leprae/genetics , Osteosarcoma/genetics , United Kingdom
2.
Tuberculosis (Edinb) ; 128: 102088, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34022508

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The remains of a 3-5 year-old child from the late mediaeval cemetery serving the Priory of St. Peter and St. Paul, Taunton, Somerset, UK was the subject of an aDNA study. OBJECTIVE: The aim was to distinguish between two differential diagnoses suggested by earlier osteological examination of the remains; either tuberculosis or Langerhans cell histiocytosis. FINDINGS: The remains tested positive for MTB complex markers, corroborating this diagnosis reached on osteological grounds. Based on positivity for the mtp40 element and a deletion in the pks15/1 locus, we conclude that infection was due to a strain of the human pathogen M.tuberculosis belonging to lineage 4. Although DNA recovered from the case was heavily fragmented, sex determination by amelogenin PCR suggested these are the remains of a young male child. The findings are discussed considering additions to the literature since the original report. CONCLUSIONS: Descriptions of tuberculosis in children from this period are rare and burial Sk2077 represents the first UK example of a pre-adolescent individual to have a molecular diagnosis combined with osteological pathology. This provides an important reference of childhood tuberculosis and insight into the likely presence of tuberculosis in the mediaeval adult population served by this cemetery.


Subject(s)
Tuberculosis/history , Cadaver , Cemeteries , Child, Preschool , England , History, Medieval , Humans , Male , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Tuberculosis/epidemiology
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