Renata J. Henneberg
University of Adelaide
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Featured researches published by Renata J. Henneberg.
Homo-journal of Comparative Human Biology | 2011
Kara L. Holloway; Renata J. Henneberg; M. de Barros Lopes; Maciej Henneberg
Tuberculosis is a re-emerging disease and is a major problem in both developing and developed countries today. An estimated one third of the worlds population is infected and almost two million people die from the disease each year. Bone lesions occur in 3-5% of active tuberculosis cases and can be used to diagnose the disease in ancient skeletal remains. A meta-analysis was conducted on 531 palaeopathological tuberculosis cases from 221 sites (7250 BCE to 1899) on all continents for the purpose of testing two hypotheses; (1) the frequency of bone lesions does not change through time and (2) the distribution of lesions throughout the skeleton does not change over time. The frequency of bone lesions was found to significantly decrease over time (P<0.05). The distribution of bone lesions was found to change from mainly spinal in earlier time periods to include more cases in other regions of the skeleton (long bones, joints, hands, feet) in later time periods. This difference in distribution was evaluated using a Chi-squared test and found to be significant (P<0.01). These findings are an important addition to the current knowledge of the evolution of the disease and the Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016
Stella Ioannou; Sadaf Sassani; Maciej Henneberg; Renata J. Henneberg
OBJECTIVES This study focuses on the dental abnormalities observed by Sir Jonathan Hutchinson, Henry Moon and Alfred Fournier in patients with congenital syphilis and in those treated with mercury, in order to define alterations in dental morphology attributable to each of these causes. These definitions are applied to reported paleopathological cases, exploring various etiologies behind the defects, in order to aid in the diagnosis of congenital syphilis. METHODS Original works were examined for descriptions of dental abnormalities in congenital syphilis and in mercurial treatments. These descriptions were compared with dentitions of paleopathological cases (n = 4) demonstrating abnormalities attributed to congenital syphilis. RESULTS Distinct morphological differences were recognized between congenital syphilitic teeth and teeth affected by mercury. Mercury produces a pronounced deficiency in enamel of incisors, canines and first permanent molars that become rugged and pitted, and of dirty grey honeycombed appearance. Mercury-induced dental changes are evident in three out of four cases studied here. In one case, only syphilitic changes were present. DISCUSSION Dental changes in congenital syphilis range from no visible signs to those beyond the classical models of Hutchinson, Moon and Fournier. Treatment of neonates and infants with mercury produces additional changes. Signs of disease and treatment with mercury on teeth may occur together; permanent incisors, first molars and canines, are typically affected, premolars and second/third molars are usually spared. Signs of treatment with mercury might be the only evidence of the occurrence of the disease as mercury was rarely used to treat other diseases.
Journal of Anthropology | 2015
Stella Ioannou; Maciej Henneberg; Renata J. Henneberg; Timothy Anson
Without the presence of “caries sicca,” “sabre shins,” and nodes/expansion of the long bones with superficial cavitation, differential diagnosis of venereal syphilis and tuberculosis (TB) may be difficult as various infections produce similar responses. However, congenital syphilis has distinctive features facilitating a diagnosis. A case study of remains of a juvenile European settler (probably male, 8–10 years old) (B70) buried in the 19th century and excavated in 2000 from the cemetery of the Anglican Church of St. Marys in South Australia is presented. B70 demonstrated that the two diseases might have been present in the same individual, congenital syphilis and TB. Widespread destruction of vertebral bodies and kyphosis-related rib deformations indicate advanced TB. Severe dental hypoplasia is limited to permanent incisors and first molars; there is pitting on the palate, periosteal reaction on the skull vault, and thinned clavicles. Dental signs are not limited to “screwdriver” central incisors and mulberry molars. Apical portions of the crowns of permanent upper, lower, central, and lateral incisors have multiple hypoplastic-disorganized defects; deciduous canines have severely hypoplastic crowns while possibly hypoplastic occlusal surfaces of lower deciduous second molars are largely destroyed by extensive caries. These dental abnormalities resemble teeth affected by mercurial treatment in congenital syphilitic patients as described by Hutchinson.
Studi della Soprintendenza archeologica di Pompei | 2002
Maciej Henneberg; Renata J. Henneberg
Archive | 2015
F. Donald Pate; Renata J. Henneberg; Maciej Henneberg
Advances in Anthropology | 2013
Kara L. Holloway; Renata J. Henneberg; Miguel A. de Barros Lopes; Kaspar Staub; Karl Link; Frank J. Rühli; Maciej Henneberg
BMC Cancer | 2018
Wenpeng You; Frank J. Rühli; Renata J. Henneberg; Maciej Henneberg
Archives of Oral Biology | 2018
Stella Ioannou; Renata J. Henneberg; Maciej Henneberg
The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017
Stella Ioannou; Renata J. Henneberg; Maciej Henneberg
The 84th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, St. Louis, MO | 2015
Stella Ioannou; Maciej Henneberg; Renata J. Henneberg; Timothy Anson