Abstract
Gout has been part of human history for thousands of years. Skeletal evidence of the disease among past people in Europe is often associated with high-status individuals whose lifestyles comprised risk factors for gout, including increased sedentism and greater access to rich, high-caloric, food. A growing body of evidence, however, has shown that multiple factors other than lifestyle also contribute to gout development. In 2011, Buckley presented a review of modern and pre-modern gout cases in which she proposed that selective pressures may partly underlie the high prevalence of gout in the population history of the Pacific region. In this paper, we provide an update on Buckley’s 2011 review of gout in human history. We also review early life stress as a potential underlying factor to consider for gout development, particularly among small prehistoric communities where opulent lifestyles traditionally associated with gout were unlikely to have occurred.
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Ling, N. Y., Halcrow, S. E., & Buckley, H. R. (2023, December 1). Gout in Paleopathology: A Review with Some Etiological Considerations. Gout, Urate, and Crystal Deposition Disease. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI). https://doi.org/10.3390/gucdd1040018
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