Public Defence: Elin Therese Brødholt

M.A. Elin Therese Brødholt at Institute of Basic Medical Sciences will be defending the thesis “Bone mineral density in archaeological populations of Norway. Temporal patterns of bone loss related to age, sex and socioeconomic status in the 8th - 19th centuries AD” for the degree of PhD (Philosophiae Doctor).

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Photo: Carina Knudsen, UiO. 

Due to copyright issues, an electronic copy of the thesis must be ordered from the faculty. For the faculty to have time to process the order, the order must be received by the faculty at the latest 2 days before the public defence. Orders received later than 2 days before the defence will not be processed. After the public defence, please address any inquiries regarding the thesis to the candidate.

Trial Lecture – time and place

See Trial Lecture.

Adjudication committee

  • First opponent: Professor Niels Lynnerup, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Second opponent: Postdoctoral Fellow Lene B. Solberg, Oslo University Hospital, Norway
  • Third member and chair of the evaluation committee: Professor II Arne Stray-Pedersen, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo

Chair of the Defence

Professor Emeritus Haakon Breien Benestad, University of Oslo

Principal Supervisor

Professor Trygve Brauns Leergaard, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo

Summary

Osteoporosis has a high incidence rate in Norway and is among the most common conditions among elderly Norwegians. Clinically, osteoporosis is associated with reduced bone mineral density (BMD), typically assessed by Dual Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry (DXA). Bone loss is an age-related and postmenopausal phenomenon that displays genetic variability.

There is scarce information about the prevalence of osteoporosis and patterns of bone loss in past populations of Norway. Few studies are conducted, yielding diverse results without consistent trends. Furthermore, it is unclear to what extent the reported BMD variation is linked to social inequality. The present thesis aims to fill this knowledge gap by investigating the long-term historical pattern of BMD variation in past populations of Norway by assessing BMD in skeletal remains from the 8th to 19th century AD as an indicator of health and socioeconomic status (SES), in relation to age, sex and stature patterns.

Our results revealed significant BMD variation through Norway's prehistoric and historical periods. We found that BMD increased significantly from the Late Iron Age to the medieval period, followed by a significant decline from the medieval to the post-Reformation period. Overall, our findings indicate a gradual transition towards a modern pattern of late bone loss seen in the contemporary Norwegian population. In addition, the patterns of age-related bone loss were diverse, with substantial temporal changes, and the bone loss often exceeded that observed in the population today. Furthermore, our findings indicate that femur neck BMD may be a valuable indicator of SES: individuals of high status had significantly higher BMD than individuals from the parish population. In addition, we demonstrated that parish population females had a significantly higher occurrence of osteopenia and osteoporosis than high-status females, possibly related to a lower attained peak BMD in childhood.

Additional information

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Published Mar. 13, 2023 4:56 PM - Last modified Mar. 24, 2023 9:47 AM