5 results on '"Stefan, Flohr"'
Search Results
2. An Osteometric Study on the Variation in Orientation of the Lesser Trochanter in an Early Medieval Human Skeletal Assemblage and Comparison with an Individual from the Late Upper Palaeolithic
- Author
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Stefan Flohr, Jörg Orschiedt, Uwe Kierdorf, Horst Kierdorf, and A. Rieger
- Subjects
030222 orthopedics ,Archeology ,education.field_of_study ,060101 anthropology ,Iliopsoas Muscle ,Population ,06 humanities and the arts ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Osteometry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lesser Trochanter ,Anthropology ,Orientation (geometry) ,Upper Paleolithic ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,0601 history and archaeology ,Femur ,education - Abstract
Anatomical textbooks describe the lesser trochanter in contemporary humans as being oriented posteromedially. In contrast, orientation of the lesser trochanter towards posterior was observed in some human femora from the Upper Paleolithic, including the femur of a young adult individual from Germany (Irlich 1), radiocarbon dated to 12,500 - 11,200 BP (calibrated AMS age). The present study analysed the orientation of the lesser trochanter in femora originating from an early medieval skeletal assemblage (Greding, Germany) and compared the results with those for the Irlich 1 femur. Eleven landmarks, four on the proximal femur, four on the mid-shaft and three on the distal femur, were recorded with a MicroScribe® digitizer, and analyzed using Auto-CAD® 2010 software. Seven angles and five distances were measured. In the Greding femora, significant differences (P < 0.05) between sexes were found for several linear measurements, while no significant sex-related differences existed for angular measurements. For some angular variables related to the orientation of the lesser trochanter, the values for the Irlich 1 femur lay outside the range of variation of the Greding specimens, reflecting the more posterior orientation of the lesser trochanter in the Irlich 1 femur. This posterior orientation of the lesser trochanter was not associated with a particularly low degree of femoral anteversion. It is hypothesized that the differences in orientation of the lesser trochanter between the Irlich 1 femur (and other femora of Upper Paleolithic individuals) and the femora from Greding could basically reflect differences in traction exercised by the iliopsoas muscle during infancy and childhood between the sedentary agricultural population from Greding and Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherers with a mobile lifestyle.
- Published
- 2017
3. How Reproducibly Can Human Ear Ossicles Be Measured? A Study of Inter-Observer Error
- Author
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Stefan Flohr, Jasmin Leckelt, Uwe Kierdorf, and Horst Kierdorf
- Subjects
Observer Variation ,Orthodontics ,Reproducibility ,Histology ,Observational error ,Anthropometry ,Observer (quantum physics) ,Ossicles ,Incus ,Reproducibility of Results ,Malleus ,Anatomy ,Digital microscope ,Osteometry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Forensic Anthropology ,Humans ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Biotechnology ,Mathematics - Abstract
Ear ossicles have thus far received little attention in biological anthropology. For the use of these bones as a source of biological information, it is important to know how reproducibly they can be measured. We determined inter-observer errors for measurements recorded by two observers on mallei (N = 119) and incudes (N = 124) obtained from human skeletons recovered from an early medieval cemetery in southern Germany. Measurements were taken on-screen on images of the bones obtained with a digital microscope. In the case of separately acquired images, mean inter-observer error ranged between 0.50 and 9.59% (average: 2.63%) for malleus measurements and between 0.67 and 7.11% (average: 2.01%) for incus measurements. Coefficients of reliability ranged between 0.72 and 0.99 for the malleus measurements and between 0.61 and 0.98 for those of the incus. Except for one incus measurement, readings performed by the two observers on the same set of photographs produced lower inter-observer errors and higher coefficients of reliability than the method involving separate acquisition of images by the observers. Across all linear measurements, absolute inter-observer error was independent of the mean size of the measured variable for both bones. So far, studies on human ear ossicles have largely neglected the issue of measurement error and its potential implication for the interpretation of the data. Knowledge of measurement error is of special importance if results obtained by different researchers are combined into a single database. It is, therefore, suggested that the reproducibility of measurements should be addressed in all future studies of ear ossicles.
- Published
- 2010
4. Mastoiditis-Paleopathological evidence of a rarely reported disease
- Author
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Michael Schultz and Stefan Flohr
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Mastoid process ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Mastoiditis ,Adolescent ,Paleopathology ,Disease ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Germany ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Pathological ,Subclinical infection ,060101 anthropology ,business.industry ,Temporal Bone ,06 humanities and the arts ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Surgery ,Anthropology ,Female ,Anatomy ,business ,Rare disease - Abstract
Since antibiotics have become available, mastoiditis has become a rare disease in modern Western societies. However, it is still common in developing countries. It can be hypothesized that in earlier historical and prehistoric times, mastoiditis must have posed a serious threat to people's lives, and that the prevalence of this disease is probably underrepresented in the paleopathological literature. The present study identifies pathological changes in the pneumatized cells of the mastoid process in human skeletal samples from two early medieval cemeteries from Germany (Dirmstein: n = 152 mastoids, Rhens: n = 71 mastoids), using macroscopic, endoscopic, low-power microscopic, scanning-electron and light microscopic techniques, and draws some epidemiological conclusions as to the frequency of the disease diagnosed in the archaeological samples. Osseous changes because of mastoiditis were diagnosed in 83.4% of the temporal bones. The frequency in the skeletal sample from Dirmstein was higher than in the sample from Rhens. In both populations, males were more often affected than females and older individuals more often than younger individuals. The high frequency of mastoiditis observed was most likely due to an accumulation of osseous changes during individual lifetimes and supports the hypothesis that mastoiditis was a serious health problem in pre-antibiotic times. It may be assumed that subclinical forms of mastoiditis and their osseous manifestations may even nowadays occur more often than was previously thought. It is suggested that the disease should be given more consideration in paleopathological investigations. Am J Phys Anthropol 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2009
5. Osseous changes due to mastoiditis in human skeletal remains
- Author
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Stefan Flohr and Michael Schultz
- Subjects
Mastoid process ,Archeology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mastoiditis ,education.field_of_study ,060101 anthropology ,060102 archaeology ,business.industry ,Population ,06 humanities and the arts ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Otitis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anthropology ,medicine ,Middle ear ,0601 history and archaeology ,medicine.symptom ,education ,business ,Paleopathology - Abstract
Mastoiditis is a disease that follows otitis media and may lead to severe endocranial complications. Most studies on mastoiditis and middle ear diseases in archaeological skeletal remains are based on radiological investigations. The following study describes the morphological changes in the pneumatised cells of the mastoid process due to mastoiditis in archaeological skeletal remains, based on macroscopic, endoscopic, light and scanning-electron microscopic investigations. For the purposes of this study, we used an early medieval Frankish population from Dirmstein, State of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2009
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