Which types of bony changes in the maxillary sinus indicate chronic sinusitis?
Which types of bony changes in the maxillary sinus indicate chronic sinusitis?
Objectives: to determine which types of bone lesion (spicules, lobules, porous bone) in the maxillary sinus indicate sinusitis
Methods: subadjacent dental disease is a cause of maxillary sinusitis; if a lesion type indicates sinusitis it should be more common above diseased posterior maxillary teeth than a lesion type that is not indicative of sinusitis. The study sample is a British Mediaeval human skeletal collection.
Results: porous bone lesions (chiefly new bone deposits) in maxillary sinuses are associated with subadjacent dental disease; spicules/lobules of bone in the sinus are not.
Conclusions.: the results support the idea that porous lesions indicate sinusitis but the spicules/lobules may not. Spicules, lobules and porous lesions within the maxillary sinus should be analysed separately in biocultural studies; it would be prudent to regard only the porous lesions as indicative of sinusitis.
Significance.: maxillary sinusitis is commonly used as a health indicator in palaeopathology, and spicular deposits are generally the most common type of alterations. By assuming that they are indicative of sinusitis we may have been greatly overestimating the prevalence of bony sinusitis in the past.
Limitations: these conclusions are provisional. Further work on larger, more diverse samples, together with more detailed anatomical studies on lesion location and structure is ongoing.
spicules, porosity, dental disease, odontogenic
16-23
Mays, S.
dc5486e7-0b03-494e-a274-7e57c8b8d34c
Stark, S.
d3cbc010-2756-4abf-8821-73e2f673da2f
Zakrzewski, S.
d80afd94-feff-4fe8-96e9-f3db79bba99d
Vekony, A.
d3e85a22-2765-414b-bcae-e5adad87ae03
11 June 2024
Mays, S.
dc5486e7-0b03-494e-a274-7e57c8b8d34c
Stark, S.
d3cbc010-2756-4abf-8821-73e2f673da2f
Zakrzewski, S.
d80afd94-feff-4fe8-96e9-f3db79bba99d
Vekony, A.
d3e85a22-2765-414b-bcae-e5adad87ae03
Mays, S., Stark, S., Zakrzewski, S. and Vekony, A.
(2024)
Which types of bony changes in the maxillary sinus indicate chronic sinusitis?
International Journal of Paleopathology, 46, .
Abstract
Objectives: to determine which types of bone lesion (spicules, lobules, porous bone) in the maxillary sinus indicate sinusitis
Methods: subadjacent dental disease is a cause of maxillary sinusitis; if a lesion type indicates sinusitis it should be more common above diseased posterior maxillary teeth than a lesion type that is not indicative of sinusitis. The study sample is a British Mediaeval human skeletal collection.
Results: porous bone lesions (chiefly new bone deposits) in maxillary sinuses are associated with subadjacent dental disease; spicules/lobules of bone in the sinus are not.
Conclusions.: the results support the idea that porous lesions indicate sinusitis but the spicules/lobules may not. Spicules, lobules and porous lesions within the maxillary sinus should be analysed separately in biocultural studies; it would be prudent to regard only the porous lesions as indicative of sinusitis.
Significance.: maxillary sinusitis is commonly used as a health indicator in palaeopathology, and spicular deposits are generally the most common type of alterations. By assuming that they are indicative of sinusitis we may have been greatly overestimating the prevalence of bony sinusitis in the past.
Limitations: these conclusions are provisional. Further work on larger, more diverse samples, together with more detailed anatomical studies on lesion location and structure is ongoing.
Text
IJP-D-23-00086_R3
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
MaysStarkZakrzewskiVekony Sinusitis IJPP 2024
- Version of Record
Text
1-s2.0-S1879981724002894-main
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 31 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2024
Published date: 11 June 2024
Keywords:
spicules, porosity, dental disease, odontogenic
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490946
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490946
ISSN: 1879-9817
PURE UUID: f5037304-8979-40de-870c-5553c9ac108a
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Date deposited: 10 Jun 2024 16:37
Last modified: 12 Jun 2024 01:39
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Contributors
Author:
S. Stark
Author:
A. Vekony
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