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Bones electronic resource Orthopaedic Pathologies in Roman Imperial Age / by Andrea Piccioli, Valentina Gazzaniga, Paola Catalano.

By: Piccioli, Andrea [author.]Contributor(s): Gazzaniga, Valentina [author.] | Catalano, Paola [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015Edition: 1st ed. 2015Description: XXI, 154 p. 199 illus., 141 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319194851Subject(s): medicine | paleontology | Radiology | Orthopedics | Medicine & Public Health | Orthopedics | Imaging / Radiology | PaleontologyDDC classification: 616.7 LOC classification: RD701-811Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Part I: 1 The study of ancient bone remains -- 2 Study and data description -- Part II: 3 Traumatic pathologies -- 4 Joint degenerative pathologies -- 5 Oncologic pathologies -- 6 Infective and Metabolic Diseases.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book presents the results of a unique macroscopic and radiological analysis, by X-ray and CT scan, of the bone pathologies of about 1800 subjects who lived at the time of the Roman Empire (first and second centuries A.D.) and whose remains were recovered during the excavation of a suburban necropolis of Rome. The survey, which represents a collaboration between the Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology and the Special Superintendent for the Archaeological Heritage of Rome, has yielded incredible images of different orthopaedic diseases in a period when no surgical treatment was available: there are cases of infection (osteomyelitis), metabolic disease (gout), hematologic disease (multiple myeloma), traumatic lesions and their complications, and degenerative pathology (osteoarthritis, particularly secondary and overload). A multidisciplinary team including orthopaedists, paleopathologists, radiologists, and medical historians has evaluated the major groups of bone disease in the population finding out incredible cases and picture of ortho-traumatologic pathologies in a pre-surgical era. The homogeneity of the sample and the number of subjects make this a study of fundamental importance.  .
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Part I: 1 The study of ancient bone remains -- 2 Study and data description -- Part II: 3 Traumatic pathologies -- 4 Joint degenerative pathologies -- 5 Oncologic pathologies -- 6 Infective and Metabolic Diseases.

This book presents the results of a unique macroscopic and radiological analysis, by X-ray and CT scan, of the bone pathologies of about 1800 subjects who lived at the time of the Roman Empire (first and second centuries A.D.) and whose remains were recovered during the excavation of a suburban necropolis of Rome. The survey, which represents a collaboration between the Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology and the Special Superintendent for the Archaeological Heritage of Rome, has yielded incredible images of different orthopaedic diseases in a period when no surgical treatment was available: there are cases of infection (osteomyelitis), metabolic disease (gout), hematologic disease (multiple myeloma), traumatic lesions and their complications, and degenerative pathology (osteoarthritis, particularly secondary and overload). A multidisciplinary team including orthopaedists, paleopathologists, radiologists, and medical historians has evaluated the major groups of bone disease in the population finding out incredible cases and picture of ortho-traumatologic pathologies in a pre-surgical era. The homogeneity of the sample and the number of subjects make this a study of fundamental importance.  .

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