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Radiographic age estimation based on degenerative changes of vertebrae
Authors:Bradley J Adams PhD  Erin Butler MS  Stephanie M Fuehr MA  Fransheska Olivares-Pérez MS  Alexandra Semma Tamayo MSc
Institution:1. New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner, New York, New York, USA;2. University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA;3. SUNY Binghamton, Anthropology Department, Binghamton, New York, USA
Abstract:Age estimation is an important component of decedent identification. When assessing adult remains, anthropologists frequently use gross examination of skeletal elements, such as clavicles, ribs, and pubic symphyses. For fleshed bodies, this requires the removal of these elements and maceration prior to analysis. A new method was developed using radiographic imaging to estimate age from degenerative changes of the lower thoracic and upper lumbar vertebrae. This technique will complement anthropological age estimation methods in young and middle-aged adults and may serve as a stand-alone method for older individuals. Digital radiographs from 240 medical examiner cases were evaluated. The sample included 120 females and 120 males between the ages of 18 and 101 years. A 3-phased scoring system was used for the target vertebrae. Transition analysis was conducted on binned average scores and a Bayesian approach was used to assign age intervals. At the 90% credible interval, individuals in Bin 1 were under 36 years of age while those in Bin 3 were over 47 years of age. Individuals in Bin 2 showed too much age variation to be informative. No significant differences were found between males and females. These findings will be especially useful in the age estimation of older adults and may eliminate the need for skeletal sampling in medicolegal cases where advanced degenerative changes are radiographically observed in the lower thoracic and/or upper lumbar vertebrae. This method was developed for use on fleshed individuals but may also be applicable to skeletonized remains.
Keywords:bayes  biological profile  forensic anthropology  NYC OCME  radiographs  transition analysis  unidentified decedents
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