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A Healed Intertrochanteric Femur Fracture, Shoulder, and Rib Fractures in an Ancient Nubian Female: An Osteoarchaeological Perspective

Title: A Healed Intertrochanteric Femur Fracture, Shoulder, and Rib Fractures in an Ancient Nubian Female: An Osteoarchaeological Perspective
Authors: Randall T. Loder; Michele R. Buzon; Kaitlyn E. Sanders
Source: The Scientific World Journal, Vol 2024 (2024)
Publisher Information: Wiley, 2024.
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: LCC:Technology; LCC:Medicine; LCC:Science
Subject Terms: Technology; Medicine; Science
Description: This report is a case of a healed proximal intertrochanteric femur fracture nonunion in an ancient Nubian adult female, approximately 58 years old at the time of death, from the Tombos archaeological site in present day northern Sudan. Tombos was founded as an Egyptian colonial town during the New Kingdom Period (14001070 BC). The individual was radiocarbon dated to 1114-910 BC and also exhibited healed fractures of the left proximal humerus and ribs. There was shortening and mild atrophy of the right femur compared to the left; radiographs demonstrated a varus deformity of the proximal femur with associated retroversion. Bone density analysis revealed that the tissue mineral density z-score for this individual was −0.798, with the z-score for Tombos females 15–24 years old being 0.396, or a total difference of 1.194. This indicates that the individual was osteopenic but not osteoporotic prior to demise. This is an important case as it occurred approximately 3000 years ago and is the oldest known reported case of a healed intertrochanteric hip fracture in the archaeological literature. Archaeological cases of intertrochanteric hip fractures are rare, with none previously reported from the BC era. The timing of these multiple fractures is unknown, but all healed before the demise of the individual. Thus, there must have been considerable care afforded to such an individual to minimize the morbidities associated with nonoperative care of such a fracture. If all these fractures occurred at the same time due to a traumatic, accidental injury, the Modified Injury Severity Score (MISS) would be 25. Modern day trauma resuscitation and orthopaedic care gives an estimated mortality for such a MISS score of 28% for those
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 1537-744X
Relation: https://doaj.org/toc/1537-744X
DOI: 10.1155/2024/8339694
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/aaf0160bf4394b9a93d47cdcf42e995d
Accession Number: edsdoj.f0160bf4394b9a93d47cdcf42e995d
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals