Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the leading cause of disability in North American and has major economic consequences for society. People with knee OA experience the worst quality of life, among musculoskeletal conditions, with function and mobility being influenced by symptoms such as pain and stiffness. Ho...

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Main Author: Young, Janet
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
ICF
MRI
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23644
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:OOU.#10393/23644 2023-05-15T16:53:37+02:00 Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations Young, Janet 2013-01-11T21:20:48Z http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23644 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23644 ICF ICD-10 paleopathology disease degeneration osteoarthritis knee impairment MRI bioarchaeology osteoarthritis initiative intercondylar notch determinants of health physical environment social environment Huron Inuit mobility disability Thèse / Thesis 2013 ftcanadathes 2014-06-14T23:47:23Z Osteoarthritis (OA) is the leading cause of disability in North American and has major economic consequences for society. People with knee OA experience the worst quality of life, among musculoskeletal conditions, with function and mobility being influenced by symptoms such as pain and stiffness. However, the impact of OA symptoms varies due to intrinsic and extrinsic factors, leading many researchers to employ biopsychosocial and other population health frameworks to study the disease. These population health approaches have not been adopted when studying knee OA outcomes in bioarchaeology, where a limited biological lens prevails due to the sole reliance on skeletal remains. The purpose of this research was to explore methods for identifying the impairment potential of knee OA in archaeological populations using a clinical sample and population health approaches. Clinical studies have the advantage of assessing not only the biological implications of knee OA but also the functional outcomes. By creating a knee OA grading system applicable for both MRI and dry bone femora samples (Clinical Archaeological Osteoarthritis Score) a link between clinical and archaeological populations was proposed. Using this link to infer functional deficits onto archaeological populations using population health frameworks, a theoretical analysis was performed with two populations; the 17th century Huron and the 19th century Inuit from the Igloolik region of Nunavut. The results demonstrated the increased impairment potential of knee OA in the Inuit population versus the Huron population, produced by contrasting factors captured by the determinants of health, including social and physical environments. Thesis Igloolik inuit Nunavut Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Nunavut Igloolik ENVELOPE(-81.800,-81.800,69.378,69.378)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
topic ICF
ICD-10
paleopathology
disease
degeneration
osteoarthritis
knee
impairment
MRI
bioarchaeology
osteoarthritis initiative
intercondylar notch
determinants of health
physical environment
social environment
Huron
Inuit
mobility
disability
spellingShingle ICF
ICD-10
paleopathology
disease
degeneration
osteoarthritis
knee
impairment
MRI
bioarchaeology
osteoarthritis initiative
intercondylar notch
determinants of health
physical environment
social environment
Huron
Inuit
mobility
disability
Young, Janet
Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
topic_facet ICF
ICD-10
paleopathology
disease
degeneration
osteoarthritis
knee
impairment
MRI
bioarchaeology
osteoarthritis initiative
intercondylar notch
determinants of health
physical environment
social environment
Huron
Inuit
mobility
disability
description Osteoarthritis (OA) is the leading cause of disability in North American and has major economic consequences for society. People with knee OA experience the worst quality of life, among musculoskeletal conditions, with function and mobility being influenced by symptoms such as pain and stiffness. However, the impact of OA symptoms varies due to intrinsic and extrinsic factors, leading many researchers to employ biopsychosocial and other population health frameworks to study the disease. These population health approaches have not been adopted when studying knee OA outcomes in bioarchaeology, where a limited biological lens prevails due to the sole reliance on skeletal remains. The purpose of this research was to explore methods for identifying the impairment potential of knee OA in archaeological populations using a clinical sample and population health approaches. Clinical studies have the advantage of assessing not only the biological implications of knee OA but also the functional outcomes. By creating a knee OA grading system applicable for both MRI and dry bone femora samples (Clinical Archaeological Osteoarthritis Score) a link between clinical and archaeological populations was proposed. Using this link to infer functional deficits onto archaeological populations using population health frameworks, a theoretical analysis was performed with two populations; the 17th century Huron and the 19th century Inuit from the Igloolik region of Nunavut. The results demonstrated the increased impairment potential of knee OA in the Inuit population versus the Huron population, produced by contrasting factors captured by the determinants of health, including social and physical environments.
format Thesis
author Young, Janet
author_facet Young, Janet
author_sort Young, Janet
title Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
title_short Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
title_full Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
title_fullStr Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
title_full_unstemmed Using the Osteoarthritic Femur to Identify Impairment Potential in Archaeological Populations
title_sort using the osteoarthritic femur to identify impairment potential in archaeological populations
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23644
long_lat ENVELOPE(-81.800,-81.800,69.378,69.378)
geographic Nunavut
Igloolik
geographic_facet Nunavut
Igloolik
genre Igloolik
inuit
Nunavut
genre_facet Igloolik
inuit
Nunavut
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23644
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