ABSTRACT
The prevalence, distribution and location of dental caries were studied in the permanent dentition of skeletons from a large mediaeval cemetery, where successive phases of use could be distinguished. The main phases dated from 1240 AD to 1440 AD. During this 200-year period, caries prevalence showed a statistically significant linear trend to increase. There was an increase in caries prevalence with increasing age from age band 20-25 through 26-35 to 36-45, and this trend was statistically significant in all phase groups but one. The teeth attacked by caries were chiefly molars, followed by premolars, with a low rate of attack in incisors and canines. The differences in caries prevalence between these major tooth classes were significant. Juveniles and adults presented different patterns of carious attack on tooth surfaces, occlusal surfaces being most frequently affected in juveniles, and approximal surfaces in adults. The overall caries prevalence in the mediaeval population of Whithorn was 6.4% of the teeth present, a figure similar to those published for other Scottish mediaeval groups, but lower than the caries prevalence in an English mediaeval group.
Subject(s)
Dental Caries/history , Adult , Age Distribution , Child , Dental Caries/epidemiology , Dental Caries/pathology , England/epidemiology , History, Medieval , Humans , Paleodontology , Prevalence , Root Caries/epidemiology , Root Caries/history , Root Caries/pathology , Scotland/epidemiologyABSTRACT
The prevalence, distribution and location of dental caries were studied in the deciduous dentition of 185 skeletons aged between 6 months and 13 years from a large, mostly mediaeval, cemetery, where successive phases of use could be distinguished. The main phases dated from 1240 to 1440 AD. During this period, no consistent trend or pattern of caries was identified, but there was a significantly higher caries prevalence in the age band 6-12.9 years than in the age band 0.1-5.9 years. The caries prevalence in the juveniles from the earlier Northumbrian, or Anglo-Saxon, phase of the cemetery was higher than in any mediaeval phase group, with mostly approximal surfaces affected. In the mediaeval population, first deciduous molars generally showed lower caries prevalence than second deciduous molars, significantly lower for the older age band, and maxillary molars consistently showed lower levels than mandibular molars. The highest caries rate, shown by mandibular second molars in the older age band, was 7.9%. In deciduous molars, the occlusal surface was most frequently affected by caries, whereas in the permanent molars of the same population the approximal surfaces had shown the highest level of attack. The overall caries prevalence in deciduous teeth in the mediaeval population of Whithorn was 2.3% of the teeth present, lower than the levels found in previous Scottish and English population groups, including a small assemblage of children from the Scottish sites of Elcho, Southwick and Kirkhill.