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Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)

During archaeological excavations in burial sites, sometimes stoned organic objects are found, in addition to human remains. Those objects might be of a different origin, depending on various factors influencing members of a community (i.e. diseases, trauma), which provides information about their l...

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Autores principales: Kwiatkowska, Barbara, Bisiecka, Agata, Pawelec, Łukasz, Witek, Agnieszka, Witan, Joanna, Nowakowski, Dariusz, Konczewski, Paweł, Biel, Radosław, Król, Katarzyna, Martewicz, Katarzyna, Lissek, Petr, Vařeka, Pavel, Lipowicz, Anna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8253445/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34214114
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254173
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author Kwiatkowska, Barbara
Bisiecka, Agata
Pawelec, Łukasz
Witek, Agnieszka
Witan, Joanna
Nowakowski, Dariusz
Konczewski, Paweł
Biel, Radosław
Król, Katarzyna
Martewicz, Katarzyna
Lissek, Petr
Vařeka, Pavel
Lipowicz, Anna
author_facet Kwiatkowska, Barbara
Bisiecka, Agata
Pawelec, Łukasz
Witek, Agnieszka
Witan, Joanna
Nowakowski, Dariusz
Konczewski, Paweł
Biel, Radosław
Król, Katarzyna
Martewicz, Katarzyna
Lissek, Petr
Vařeka, Pavel
Lipowicz, Anna
author_sort Kwiatkowska, Barbara
collection PubMed
description During archaeological excavations in burial sites, sometimes stoned organic objects are found, in addition to human remains. Those objects might be of a different origin, depending on various factors influencing members of a community (i.e. diseases, trauma), which provides information about their living conditions. The St. Nicholas Church archaeological site (Libkovice, Czechia) in the 18(th) century horizon of the cemetery, yielded a maturus-senilis female skeleton with a stone object in the left iliac fossa. This object was an oviform cyst-like rough structure, measuring 54 mm in length, 35 mm in maximum diameter and 0.2–0.7 mm shell thickness. Within the object there were small fetal bones (long bones, i.e. femur and two tibias, two scapulas, three ribs, vertebrae and other tiny bone fragments). Methods utilized to analyze the outer and inner surface morphology of the cyst and its inside, included: X-ray, CT imaging, SEM, histological staining and EDS. The EDS analysis revealed the presence of primarily oxygen, calcium and phosphorus in bone samples, and oxygen and silicon, in stone shell. Based on the length of the femur (20.2 mm) and tibia (16 mm) shafts, the fetal age was determined as being in the 15–18 week of pregnancy. The differential diagnosis was conducted, including for the three most probable cases: fetiform teratoma (FT), fetus-in-fetu (FIF) and lithopedion. The possibility of fetiform teratoma was discounted due to the presence of an anatomically correct spine, long bones and the proportions of the find. Although the low calcium content in the shell (2.3% atom mass), the lack of skull bones and the better developed lower limbs indicate fetus-in-fetu rather than lithopedion, the analyses results are unable to conclusively identify the object under one of these two categories since there are insufficient such cases in excavation material with which to draw comparison.
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spelling pubmed-82534452021-07-13 Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia) Kwiatkowska, Barbara Bisiecka, Agata Pawelec, Łukasz Witek, Agnieszka Witan, Joanna Nowakowski, Dariusz Konczewski, Paweł Biel, Radosław Król, Katarzyna Martewicz, Katarzyna Lissek, Petr Vařeka, Pavel Lipowicz, Anna PLoS One Research Article During archaeological excavations in burial sites, sometimes stoned organic objects are found, in addition to human remains. Those objects might be of a different origin, depending on various factors influencing members of a community (i.e. diseases, trauma), which provides information about their living conditions. The St. Nicholas Church archaeological site (Libkovice, Czechia) in the 18(th) century horizon of the cemetery, yielded a maturus-senilis female skeleton with a stone object in the left iliac fossa. This object was an oviform cyst-like rough structure, measuring 54 mm in length, 35 mm in maximum diameter and 0.2–0.7 mm shell thickness. Within the object there were small fetal bones (long bones, i.e. femur and two tibias, two scapulas, three ribs, vertebrae and other tiny bone fragments). Methods utilized to analyze the outer and inner surface morphology of the cyst and its inside, included: X-ray, CT imaging, SEM, histological staining and EDS. The EDS analysis revealed the presence of primarily oxygen, calcium and phosphorus in bone samples, and oxygen and silicon, in stone shell. Based on the length of the femur (20.2 mm) and tibia (16 mm) shafts, the fetal age was determined as being in the 15–18 week of pregnancy. The differential diagnosis was conducted, including for the three most probable cases: fetiform teratoma (FT), fetus-in-fetu (FIF) and lithopedion. The possibility of fetiform teratoma was discounted due to the presence of an anatomically correct spine, long bones and the proportions of the find. Although the low calcium content in the shell (2.3% atom mass), the lack of skull bones and the better developed lower limbs indicate fetus-in-fetu rather than lithopedion, the analyses results are unable to conclusively identify the object under one of these two categories since there are insufficient such cases in excavation material with which to draw comparison. Public Library of Science 2021-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8253445/ /pubmed/34214114 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254173 Text en © 2021 Kwiatkowska et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kwiatkowska, Barbara
Bisiecka, Agata
Pawelec, Łukasz
Witek, Agnieszka
Witan, Joanna
Nowakowski, Dariusz
Konczewski, Paweł
Biel, Radosław
Król, Katarzyna
Martewicz, Katarzyna
Lissek, Petr
Vařeka, Pavel
Lipowicz, Anna
Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title_full Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title_fullStr Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title_full_unstemmed Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title_short Differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at St. Nicholas Church cemetery (Libkovice, Czechia)
title_sort differential diagnosis of a calcified cyst found in an 18(th) century female burial site at st. nicholas church cemetery (libkovice, czechia)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8253445/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34214114
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254173
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