New Straits Times

Teeth have a Vitamin D story to tell

-

RICKETS: Fossils help shed light on what’s happening today, writes Joanna Klein

YOU don’t just have teeth in your mouth: You have around 32 fossils that tell a microscopi­c history of your health. And, scientists have found that even the old, discarded, not-so-pearly whites of people that lived hundreds of years ago tell a story about them, too.

According to a paper published in The Journal of Archaeolog­ical Science, researcher­s discovered a permanent record of vitamin D deficiency in the microscopi­c structure of old teeth and shed new light on the daily challenges faced by people of the past.

When the body doesn’t get enough vitamin D from the sun or food, they found, teeth develop gaps or bubbles in dentin, the layer under enamel that makes up about 85 per cent of a tooth’s structure. These abnormalit­ies reveal stories not just about past environmen­tal conditions or food availabili­ty, but about culture and society as well.

Throughout history and across the world, there have been epidemics of children with rickets, a disease characteri­sed by bowed legs and deformed hips, caused in part by a lack of sunlight. Anthropolo­gists have identified rickets outbreaks by examining skeletal remains in places at high latitudes with limited access to sunlight, like some in England, Canada or France. But the vast majority of children who had rickets will outgrow it. That makes the dental record of the condition important because abnormalit­ies within teeth don’t disappear with age, as evidence of bowed legs, for example, can, in adult bones. Understand­ing rickets outbreaks in the past can help in the study of children’s health today.

The researcher­s, led by Megan Brickley, an anthropolo­gist at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, examined the skeletal remains of six individual­s who had been buried in the 18th and 19th centuries in cemeteries known to contain cases of rickets and individual­s who had survived childhood vitamin D deficienci­es. The team determined who likely had rickets from their bones and then analysed their teeth, cutting each tooth into several transparen­t slices, thinner than a sheet of tissue paper, and examining them under microscope­s.

They found that a 24-year-old man who had been buried in Quebec between 1771 and 1860 had suffered four bouts of rickets in his short life: twice before the age of 2, once again around the age of 6, and again, in a somewhat severe episode, around the age of 12. Evidence of this final episode in his third molar correlated with an abnormal curvature in his tailbone that only could have developed around the same time.

“We were able to see inside that tooth, what was housed in there, years ago,” Brickley said.

Teeth from this

They reached this precision because teeth develop at different rates and leave behind concentric circles like tree rings over time. The researcher­s could look at the abnormalit­ies within those layers to estimate occurrence and severity.

“You can’t get that info from a skeleton,” said Lori D’Ortenzio, a paleopatho­logist who worked on the study.

Lynne Schepartz, an anthropolo­gist at the University of the Witwatersr­and in South Africa who specialise­s in prehistori­c health and was not involved in the study, found the results exciting. Studying vitamin D deficienci­es in teeth, she said, could reveal informatio­n about limited access to sunlight among certain population­s as a result of labour roles, culture or social status.

suggest he had rickets as a child.

But, the insights aren’t limited to the past. It’s estimated that more than a billion people worldwide don’t get enough vitamin D, and around the world rickets still can affect up to nine per cent of the childhood population in some places. Knowing about the past and lifestyle factors that led to rickets in particular communitie­s worldwide may help put what’s happening today into historical context.

In Britain, for example, rickets is on the rise. The fact that vitamin D deficiency could be recorded in teeth, “was certainly news to me”, John Middleton, president of Britain’s Faculty of Public Health, wrote in an email.

“We are concerned about dietary deficiency, lack of dairy, fish and meat, and particular­ly lack of sunlight for children who spend all their time indoors watching TV or playing video games,” he said.

This may not be so abnormal — in the past, Victorian smog, poor nutrition, working indoors and clothing that covered most of the body contribute­d to rickets. Now with records from teeth, it’s possible to find even more cases in adults that were previously missed.

The World Health Organisati­on currently warns mothers about vitamin D deficiency, which is common during pregnancy and linked to poor health outcomes for both mother and child. Brickley said archaeolog­ical evidence from the molars of those no longer living could provide new links between prenatal vitamin D deficiency and early death or chronic disease. NYT

 ??  ?? skeleton of a man buried in a French cemetery
NYT pic
skeleton of a man buried in a French cemetery NYT pic
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia