Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.

Acellular extrinsic fibre cementum (AEFC) has been widely utilised in cementochronology to estimate age at death, seasonality, and for life-history reconstruction. Smoking has been commonplace in the UK since the 17th century and is known to compromise oral health and to modulate physiological proce...

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Main Authors: Valentina Perrone, Anna M Davies-Barrett, Mario Migliario, Patrick Randolph-Quinney, Sarah A Inskip, Edward C Schwalbe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323812
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author Valentina Perrone
Anna M Davies-Barrett
Mario Migliario
Patrick Randolph-Quinney
Sarah A Inskip
Edward C Schwalbe
author_facet Valentina Perrone
Anna M Davies-Barrett
Mario Migliario
Patrick Randolph-Quinney
Sarah A Inskip
Edward C Schwalbe
author_sort Valentina Perrone
collection DOAJ
description Acellular extrinsic fibre cementum (AEFC) has been widely utilised in cementochronology to estimate age at death, seasonality, and for life-history reconstruction. Smoking has been commonplace in the UK since the 17th century and is known to compromise oral health and to modulate physiological processes. This study aimed to investigate whether AEFC analysis could identify smoking activity in both modern and archaeological populations. A modern sample (70 teeth from 46 donors) with known age, sex, and smoking status was compared with an archaeological sample (18 teeth from 18 individuals), dating from the 18th/19th centuries in Coventry, UK, whose biographical information was recorded from coffin plates where available. Smoking status for the archaeological individuals was inferred from pipe notches and dental staining. AEFC analysis that was blinded to smoking status measured increment count, overall width and the presence of irregularities within the cementum microstructure in both samples. Results demonstrated that the AEFC width was significantly lower (p = 0.008) in current smokers compared to ex-smokers. Additionally, individuals with a history of smoking were significantly more likely to display disrupted incremental patterns within their AEFC (p < 0.001). This research suggests an association between smoking and periodontal ligament health, which influences AEFC formation and shows that the AEFC provides a record of smoking-related oral health damage. This research expands the potential applications of cementochronology to forensic and archaeological investigations for life history reconstruction.
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spelling doaj-art-d508608fa3a94530ad42719f548d01852025-08-20T03:25:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01205e032381210.1371/journal.pone.0323812Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.Valentina PerroneAnna M Davies-BarrettMario MigliarioPatrick Randolph-QuinneySarah A InskipEdward C SchwalbeAcellular extrinsic fibre cementum (AEFC) has been widely utilised in cementochronology to estimate age at death, seasonality, and for life-history reconstruction. Smoking has been commonplace in the UK since the 17th century and is known to compromise oral health and to modulate physiological processes. This study aimed to investigate whether AEFC analysis could identify smoking activity in both modern and archaeological populations. A modern sample (70 teeth from 46 donors) with known age, sex, and smoking status was compared with an archaeological sample (18 teeth from 18 individuals), dating from the 18th/19th centuries in Coventry, UK, whose biographical information was recorded from coffin plates where available. Smoking status for the archaeological individuals was inferred from pipe notches and dental staining. AEFC analysis that was blinded to smoking status measured increment count, overall width and the presence of irregularities within the cementum microstructure in both samples. Results demonstrated that the AEFC width was significantly lower (p = 0.008) in current smokers compared to ex-smokers. Additionally, individuals with a history of smoking were significantly more likely to display disrupted incremental patterns within their AEFC (p < 0.001). This research suggests an association between smoking and periodontal ligament health, which influences AEFC formation and shows that the AEFC provides a record of smoking-related oral health damage. This research expands the potential applications of cementochronology to forensic and archaeological investigations for life history reconstruction.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323812
spellingShingle Valentina Perrone
Anna M Davies-Barrett
Mario Migliario
Patrick Randolph-Quinney
Sarah A Inskip
Edward C Schwalbe
Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
PLoS ONE
title Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
title_full Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
title_fullStr Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
title_full_unstemmed Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
title_short Reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis - a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth.
title_sort reconstructing smoking history through dental cementum analysis a preliminary investigation on modern and archaeological teeth
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323812
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