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Rhonda R. Bathurst

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Bilateral periosteal proliferation appears similar in humans, and may result in ... AD 500-1000) from the Hickory Bend Site, Alabama (4) Significance: Zooarchaeology ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rhonda R. Bathurst


1
Hyperpulmonary Osteoarthropathy A Canine
Bioarchaeological Case Study
  • Context
  • Proto-historic Neutral Iroquois village, ca. AD
    154090 (2). Limited evidence of historic
    artifacts uncovered at the site.
  • Bundle burial found articulated and
    enmeshed within a pot (2)
  • Terrier-size domestic dog. Mature male (14),
    less than two years old (most but not all teeth
    were worn 15)
  • Case first documented (without graphics) by
    Burns (2) at which time the diagnosis of canine
    HPOA was confirmed by Dr. T. Hullard, Dean of
    Ontario Veterinary College
  • Only other known documentation of canine HPOA
    is from a pre-contact, Late Woodland occupation
    (ca. AD 500-1000) from the Hickory Bend Site,
    Alabama (4)
  • Objective
  • This poster visually documents a specific
    skeletal pathology, diagnosed in an
    archaeological dog burial from the early historic
    period in the American northeast
  • Documentation of this condition is rare, though
    this may be due to a lack of familiarity with the
    distinguishing characteristics of the disease
  • Therefore, this case study illustrates the
    distinguishing characteristics of HPOA, which has
    a similar appearance in both dogs and humans (3)
  • HPOA is non-infectious, though the primary
    conditions which can cause the disease may be.
    Possible primary infections and their importance
    to human populations are considered
  • Definition
  • Canine hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy
    (HPOA)
  • A progressive, symmetric and bilateral
    periosteal reaction (7, 9, 13) secondary to
    chronic lung conditions. Frequently terminal in
    dogs without treatment
  • Primarily involves the distal portions of
    radius, ulna, tibia, fibula, metacarpals and
    metatarsals (7, 12) - those sites associated with
    membranous or tendonous attachments

Cleveland
Skull, dorsal view
Right mandible, medial
Phalanges
Skull, lateral view
Cleveland Site (AhHb-7). Northeast of Brantford,
Ontario
Tibia partial fused fibula
Left mandible, lateral
Calcaneus metatarsals
Scapula
Vertebrae, thoracic and lumbar
left
Marked changes due to HPOA are not usually noted
on the skull, vertebral column, ribs or sternum
(7).
III
Radius
II
Ulna
Forelimb x-ray (17)
left
right
Right calcaneus tarsus
Left metacarpals
right, caudal
left, cranial
Humerus
Femur
V
IV
Note comparative lack of periosteal reaction on
tarsus
left
II
V
III
IV
left
right
right
  • Significance Palaeopathology
  • Unlike many non-specific paleopathological
    conditions, HPOA is a specific pathological
    syndrome
  • Bilateral periosteal proliferation appears
    similar in humans, and may result in the flesh
    expression of digital clubbing
  • Clubbed fingers were first documented by
    Hippocrates ca. 450 BC (10, 11), and may indicate
    the antiquity of the condition
  • HPOA has been documented in 2 human burials
    from Mesoamerica (in Ticoman, 2000 BC-AD100
    Jaina, AD 300-900) (10)
  • Significance Humans
  • The condition in dogs is secondary to chronic
    lung conditions such as tuberculosis, malignant
    thoracic tumors and broncho-pneumonia (1, 5, 7)
  • Primary infections such as tuberculosis are
    zoonotic (transmissible between dogs and humans)
    (5, 6)
  • Dogs and humans share environmental conditions
    that may cause primary infections such as
    bronchitis or lung tumors (ie. wood smoke,
    tobacco) (1)
  • Therefore, evidence of HPOA in dogs may be
    indicative of the presence of such infectious or
    causative agents within the associated human
    community
  • Conditions such as tuberculosis, cyanotic heart
    disease, cystic fibrosis, lung cancer and liver
    cirrhosis can trigger secondary HPOA in humans
    (10, 11)
  • Future epidemiological studies may benefit to
    be aware of the relationship between primary
    zoonotic diseases and secondary HPOA

right, cranial
right, cranial
left, caudal
  • Significance Zooarchaeology
  • This case documents a specific pathological
    condition known to affect domestic dogs
  • The antiquity of the disease pre-dates European
    contact in America (though this case study may
    not)
  • The extent to which the condition had
    proliferated and the rough, un-remodeled state of
    the lesions are likely indications of cause of
    death (a mortality indicator)
  • HPOA would have required a considerable amount
    of time to be established on the skeleton to such
    a degree (7). Movement would have been awkward
    and painful, making the condition obvious in the
    living dog
  • The context of the discrete bundle-burial in
    association with the chronic illness of the dog
    may suggest a certain degree of human nurturing
    or symbolic significance associated with this
    individual animal

left, caudal
Rhonda R. Bathurst McMaster University
HPO digital clubbing University of Bristol,
Faculty of Medicine, 2001
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