Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
This study
investigated whether there was any secular change in cranial vault
morphology among Koreans born between the 1930s and 1970s, a period of
dramatic shift in Korea's socioeconomic conditions.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
Using
three-dimensional MRI volumetry, we obtained the intracranial volume
(ICV) and craniometric measurements of 115 healthy Koreans: 58
individuals (32 males and 26 females) born in the 1930s (1926-1936) and
57 (28 males and 29 females) born in the 1970s (1972-1979).
RESULTS:
The intracranial volume of males was 1502.3 ± 110.3 cm
3 for the 1930s group and 1594.1 ± 99.5 cm
3 for the 1970s group, and for females, it was 1336.0 ± 53.0 cm
3 for the 1930s group and 1425.9 ± 79.6 cm
3 for the 1970s group. On average, ICV increased by 94 cm
3 in males and by 90 cm
3
in females. Cranial measurements for the 1970s group were significantly
larger than the 1930s group for both sexes except in female cranial
length. Each measurement was significantly correlated with ICV [cranial
height (R = 0.720), breadth (R = 0.706), and length (R = 0.531)]. The
cephalic index decreased from 0.846 to 0.828 in males, indicating the
cranium became narrower relative to the cranial length. In females, the
cephalic index increased from 0.831 to 0.850. Sex and birthyear were
marginally interrelated in cephalic indices.
DISCUSSION:
From
the 1930s to 1970s, the Korean Peninsula experienced important
historical shifts, and we speculate that the consequent shift in
socioeconomic status is the most likely factor responsible for Koreans'
cranial vault remodeling.
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