Mineralized area of the human rib cross‐sections from early puberty until adulthood
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2025
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Wiley
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López‐Rey, J. M., Doe, D. M., Cambra‐Moo, O., González Martín, A., & García‐Martínez, D. (2025). Mineralized area of the human rib cross‐sections from early puberty until adulthood. The Anatomical Record, ar.70001. https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.70001
Abstract
Ribs undergo numerous changes during growth and development. Although they occur both externally and internally, the latter are not as extensively documented during the transition from puberty to adulthood. Therefore, it is unknown how rib cross-sectional mineralized area changes during this period. To shed light on this issue, we micro-CT scanned ribs from each costal level belonging to 21 individuals equally distributed into three developmental groups: pre-pubescents, post-pubescents, and adults. Then we selected the cross section at the midshaft of each rib and measured its percentage of mineralized area. Our results show that adults have lower mineralized area in their rib cross sections than both pre- and post-pubescents, which is consistent with previous research. Between pre- and post-pubescents, mineralized area is greater in the latter from costal levels 1–8. We propose that this might respond to a peak of mineralized area happening during late puberty. Regarding the tendency of the data, the three groups show a U-shaped trend with two maximum values at costal levels 1 and 12 and a minimum value at levels 4–5. We suggest that greater values are located at the beginning and the end of the costal series due to the mechanical stress produced in these areas by the scalene muscles (ribs 1–2) and diaphragm (ribs 7–12) during breathing. Interestingly, the U-shaped trend is less pronounced in pubescents, whose central costal levels have relatively more mineralized area than that of adults due to ongoing maturation from the external to central costal levels.
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Funding:
JMLR is funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Grant PRE2021-097584 linked to project PID2020-115854GB-I00). DGM is funded by the Leakey Foundation (Grant 38,360 awarded for carrying out the study: “Covariation of internal and external costal anatomy and its importance for understanding the evolution of the human thorax”). The Laboratorio de Poblaciones del Pasado (LAPP) is supported by Projects PGC2018-099405-B-I00 (Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities), HAR2016-78036-P (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity), and SI4/PJI/2024-00104 (Community of Madrid).
Acknowledgments:
We acknowledge Belén Notario for all the micro-CT scans carried out at the CENIEH facilities.












