Alveolar bone loss on neolithic man remains on 38 skulls of Khirokitia's (Cyprus) inhabitants.

J Clin Periodontol

Department of Periodontology, Dental School, Athens University, Greece.

Published: October 1995

38 skulls, belonging to inhabitants of various age groups of the Neolithic settlement of Khirokitia in Cyprus (5800-3000 BC) were studied and the alveolar bone loss was evaluated in areas where teeth still existed. It was found that the alveolar bone loss increased with age. The differences deriving from the comparison of skulls belonging to older people (the mean life-span of the inhabitants was 35.2 years), with skulls belonging to younger people suggest that our findings are not due to postmortem weathering of bones through the centuries but represent a real fact. The results of this study indicate that periodontal disease has accompanied human beings since prehistoric time without being affected by civilization.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-051x.1995.tb00262.xDOI Listing

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