Abstract

The Osteological Paradox posits that skeletal lesions may differentially be interpreted as representing resilience or frailty. However, specific consideration of the etiologies and demographic distributions of individual skeletal indicators can inform the criteria on which to differentiate stress, frailty, and resilience. Adopting a life history approach and adaptive plasticity model, this study proposes a framework for the analysis and interpretation of a commonly reported skeletal lesion, cribra orbitalia, which considers the underlying mechanisms of the condition, the clinical and epidemiological literature relating to anemia and malnutrition, and the bioarcheological evidence. Data were extracted from the European (n = 33 populations) and American (n = 19 populations) modules of the Global History of Health Project. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses were applied, where time was the age-at-death, and the factor or covariate was presence or absence of cribra orbitalia. Of 37 samples that produced significant results, 21 demonstrated a change in relationship when the subadults were excluded from analysis. When subadults were included, individuals with cribra orbitalia present had statistically significant lower survival time. With subadults excluded, the relationship either became nonsignificant or was reversed. We demonstrate that in many cases the inclusion of subadults in analysis impacts upon the apparent mortality associated with cribra orbitalia. Examining cribra orbitalia in children and adults has two separate goals: in children, to determine the prevalence and risk of death associated with active lesions and stress; and in adults, to determine whether childhood health assaults that cause cribra orbitalia are associated with frailty or resilience.

Highlights

  • A substantial contribution of bioarcheology is the study of indicators of stress, frailty, and resilience in individuals and populations in the past

  • Host resistance and/or response has usually been couched in terms of negative outcomes, often discussed by way of differential frailty, with frailty potentially resulting in increased morbidity and mortality associated with stress, either as the result of inherent frailty, or frailty acquired through prior stress events

  • We propose a framework for the evaluation of cribra orbitalia, which considers the underlying mechanisms of cribra orbitalia, the clinical and epidemiological literature relating to anemia and malnutrition, and the bioarchaeological evidence

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Summary

Introduction

A substantial contribution of bioarcheology is the study of indicators of stress, frailty, and resilience in individuals and populations in the past. In this study we modify the period of interest to include up to the approximate age of sexual maturity in order to capture further phases of biological development. This modification deviates from the traditional DOHaD model but is grounded in the concept of developmental stress potentially having morbidity and mortality consequences in adulthood. We do this by way of coupling a life history approach with an epidemiologically focused methodology. We have adopted Temple's (2019) recent translation of traditional bioarcheological explorations of stress in the context of the burgeoning life history literature

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