Analysis and comparison of tooth wear in late antiquity and early middle age in populations that lived in continental and coastal Croatia using digitized VistaMetrix method

A new method for measuring dental wear

Authors

  • Ana Družijanić University of Split School of Medicine, Split, Croatia.
  • Ivan Galić Department of Oral Surgery, Clinical Hospital Split, Split, Croatia.
  • Marin Vodanović Department of Dental Anthropology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb, Croatia.
  • Mario Šlaus Croatian Academy of Science and Arts
  • Jelena Dumančić Department of Dental Anthropology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb, Croatia.
  • Marija Roguljić University of Split School of Medicine, Department of Periodontology, Split, Croatia.
  • Ana Glavina Dental Outpatient Clinic Split, Split, Croatia.
  • Andrea Galemanović Mediterranean Institute for Life Sciences (MedILS), Split, Croatia
  • Hrvoje Brkic Department of Dental Anthropology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb, Croatia.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13473827

Abstract

Background: Tooth wear is a non-pathological loss of hard tissues on the incisal and occlusal tooth surface. In archaeology, the loss of dental tissue through attrition is associated with living opportunities and habits, availability, characteristics and methods of food preparation. In forensics, tooth wear is used to estimate the dental age on cadavers. Material and methods: For this study, we used an archaeological sample from two sample collections. In this study, tooth wear was compared in archaeological samples of well-preserved maxilla and mandible specimens (n=392) from Croatian coastal and continental populations from Late Antiquity (LA) and the Early Middle Ages (EMA). The computer system VistaMetrix 1.38 was used to analyse the abrasion and attrition of hard dental tissues. The Shapiro-Wilk and chi-square tests were performed for categorical data to test the difference between two historical periods and two geographical locations, while the Kruskal-Wallis test was performed for continuous data. Results: There was a statistically significant difference in the proportion of tooth wear in total teeth area (P < 0.001) when comparing continental and coastal Croatia in LA and coastal Croatia between LA and EMA (P = 0.006 and P < 0.001, respectively). Samples from coastal Croatia from the LA period had the lowest percentage of tooth wear with a median of 8.35%, while samples from coastal Croatia from the EMA had the highest percentage of tooth wear with a median of 18.26%. Our results generally show greater tooth wear in the EMA period in male subjects.Conclusion: The results of the tooth wear research obtained with the Vista Metrix software can contribute to the study of life circumstances and changes that the analysed population has experienced in its historical development.

Author Biography

Hrvoje Brkic, Department of Dental Anthropology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb, Croatia.

School of Dental Medicine

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Published

2024-08-29

How to Cite

Družijanić, A., Galić, I., Vodanović, M., Šlaus, M., Dumančić, J., Roguljić, M., … Brkic, H. (2024). Analysis and comparison of tooth wear in late antiquity and early middle age in populations that lived in continental and coastal Croatia using digitized VistaMetrix method: A new method for measuring dental wear. The Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology - JFOS, 42(2), 39:49. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13473827

Issue

Section

Anthropology Archeology