Publications by authors named "Schamall D"

Objectives: This study aimed to reconstruct the dietary behavior of two early medieval individuals who display gnathic malformation.

Material: Two skeletons affected by temporomandibular ankylosis were analyzed, one from the Great Moravian burial site of Rajhradice (9th century AD, Czech Republic), and the other from the Avar burial site of Schӧnkirchen (8th century AD, Austria).

Methods: Carbon and nitrogen isotopic values were measured from the bone collagen of both individuals.

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Objective: Actinomycosis infection of bone is rare and its diagnosis challenging. Here, we aim to identify and verify its microstructural features and the potential value for differential diagnosis.

Materials: We investigated the dry preparation of the lumbar vertebrae and pelvic ring of a purported case of actinomycosis documented by a post-mortem examination in 1891.

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Osteoporosis is extremely frequent in post-menopausal women; nevertheless, osteoporosis in men is also a severe and frequently occurring but often underestimated disease. Increasing evidence links bone loss in male idiopathic osteoporosis and age related osteoporosis to osteoblast dysfunction rather than increased osteoclast activity as seen in postmenopausal osteoporosis. The aim of this study was to investigate gene expression of osteoblast related genes and of bone architecture in bone samples derived from elderly osteoporotic men with hip fractures (OP) in comparison to bone samples from age matched men with osteoarthritis of the hip (OA).

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Cathepsin S is a cysteine protease that controls adipocyte differentiation and has been implicated in vascular and metabolic complications of obesity. Considering the inverse relation of osteoblasts and adipocytes and their mutual precursor cell, we hypothesized that cathepsin S may also affect osteoblast differentiation and bone remodeling. Thus, the fat and bone phenotypes of young (3 months old) and aged (12 or 18 months old) cathepsin S knock-out (KO) and wild-type (WT) mice were determined.

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During an archaeological excavation in Altenberg/Linz (Upper Austria), the well-preserved skeletal remains of a mature male dated the 13th century AD were recovered. Several elements of the skeleton yielded alterations caused by trauma: beside a malunion of the left ulna which was accompanied by shortening of the diaphysis, a luxation and deformation of the left radial head was observed (Monteggia-type lesion, Bado-type I). Moreover, at the anterior aspect of the corresponding humerus, a chalice-shaped, newly built bone structure that framed the displaced capitulum radii was visible.

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Research in osteoporosis, which is a complex systemic disease, demands suitable large animal models. In pigs, most research has been done in growing minipigs, which probably are not ideal models for postmenopausal osteoporosis. Therefore, our aim was to analyze the effects of ovariectomy (OVX) and nutritive calcium shortage on multiparous Large White sows.

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Tumor-like lesions on skeletal remains put relatively high demands on paleopathological diagnostic methods. In addition to conventional anthropological determination and non-invasive methods of macroscopical description and radiodiagnostic examination, bony lesions can be analyzed more accurately, but also more elaborately by light microscopy of invasive section preparations. In this study an irregular new bone formation on the excavated skull of a juvenile individual was also investigated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM).

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There is abundant data on cancellous bone in the aging human spine, but little relating to the growing vertebral cancellous bone in childhood an adolescence. The purpose of this study was to map vertebral cancellous bone in a growth and age series of historic skeletal samples and to make comparisons with data published on recent material. Lumbar vertebral bodies were collected from 65 skeletons (0-60 years) from a medieval Nubian population.

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