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To browse Academia. Kemet in Secondlife. Tim Sandle. Lisa Sabbahy. The study of human remains from ancient Egypt has made great strides in the last decade, for the most part due to advances in medical engineering and biomolecular techniques. Ancient DNA has been retrieved from bacteria, viruses and parasites, giving specialists an entirely new method for recognizing disease.
For example, this has totally changed our perspective on tuberculosis in ancient Egypt, not only concerning the extent of its presence in the ancient Egyptian population, but in identifying the specific Mycobacterium strains causing the infection. Recent CT-scan studies have identified atherosclerosis and heart disease as a significant problem among the upper class of ancient Egypt, particularly the priestly families.
Also, the question of whether or not cancer is an old disease has been brought up again because of a recent identification of metastatic prostate cancer in an Egyptian mummy. This paper will present an overview of recent discoveries in ancient Egyptian paleopathology, made both in medical studies and excavations in the field. Barbara Cermesoni , Omar Larentis. Paleoradiological investigations of three mummified remains housed in the archaeological museum of Erba allowed us to investigate the origin, biological profile, embalming techniques and pathological conditions of finds unknown until now.
These mummified remains, belonging to the private collection of the Majnoni family, were donated to the museum without any information about their origin. We are well aware of the past issue on the commercialization of mummified remains and of the low possibility for anthropologists to have access to ancient mummies. For this reason our intent is to stimulate curators of small collections to contact team of anthropologists, radiologists and paleopathologists to grant the study of finds housed in museums with the aim of obtaining more information about the anthropological cultural heritage.