Heart Disease Plagued the Ancient Egyptians 12
mmmscience writes "CT scans of mummies have revealed that heart disease was also a common problem 3500 years ago. The scans show calcification of arterial pathways, a preserved sign of atherosclerosis, the heart disease caused by hardening arteries. Of the 16 mummies that had intact arteries, nine showed signs of significant calcification. Dr. Gregory Thomas, co-lead author on the study, stated, 'The findings suggest that we may have to look beyond modern risk factors to fully understand the disease.'"
huh? (Score:1)
All the hearts in the neighbourhood say (Score:1)
way oh way oh wayyyy oh waayy ohhhhhhh....
Croak like an Egyptian.
Food propoganda. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Wow, you guys are really messing up my sarcasm detector. It would make sense out of context, maybe, but... What is this, I don't even?
Is he complaining about the hippie attitude of "well gee, everyone was so much healthier back then before this evil technology thing"? Is that really relevant? As far as I understand the article is about assessing contribution of modern factors to heart disease. (Obviously they would get the combined effect of added modern risk factors minus effects of medicine) Maybe I'm con
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Just to inject a note of boring reality into your moderately-well-founded sarcastic diatribe, did you know that the Greenland icesheet includes layers that document (amongst other things) the development
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Interesting info on the lead mining. It's not one of the more popular metals for historical topics.
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Aye. But it's been important for a long time. Serious proposals have had it that lead (via drinking water sub-clinical poisoning) was largely responsible for the gibbon-like "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire". Whether they're strictly correct, I'd doubt ; but they do make a good case for plumbosis having had an effect on families who could afford to live with plumbing. ... how many legions
On the other hand
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hot dates (Score:2)