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The Papyri. Papri. Papyrus is a type of paper made from the fibers of the Cyperus papyrus plant (of the Sedge family)There are eight known medical papyri, the most famous of which being the Edwin Smith Papyrus, the Ebers Papyrus, the Hearst Papyrus, and the Kahun Papyrus. Edwin Smith Papyrus. One of the most importantWritten circa 1700 BC, but most of it is based on information from texts dating back to 2640 BCFound by an Arab and sold to an American named Edwin Smith in 186222 pages long; m140
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1. copyright 2004 Sam Chandler Ancient Egyptian Medicine Sam Chandler
Clayton Toepfer
2. The Papyri The papyri are the source of the majority of our knowledge of Egyptian medicine
The papyri are the source of the majority of our knowledge of Egyptian medicine
3. Papri Papyrus is a type of paper made from the fibers of the Cyperus papyrus plant (of the Sedge family)
There are eight known medical papyri, the most famous of which being the Edwin Smith Papyrus, the Ebers Papyrus, the Hearst Papyrus, and the Kahun Papyrus Also there’s a Kalup Papyrus, but rest couldn’t findAlso there’s a Kalup Papyrus, but rest couldn’t find
4. Edwin Smith Papyrus One of the most important
Written circa 1700 BC, but most of it is based on information from texts dating back to 2640 BC
Found by an Arab and sold to an American named Edwin Smith in 1862
22 pages long; mostly about wounds, treatments
5. Ebers Papyrus Circa 1534 BC
Said to have been found in Thebes
Also bought by Smith in 1862, but then sold to Egyptologist George Ebers in 1872
110 pages—by far the longest
Contains spells to avoid supernatural intervention on diagnosis and treatment
Many diseases discussed, including injuries, wounds Khet- stomach diseasesKhet- stomach diseases
6. Kahun Papyrus Circa 1825 BC
Gynecological
In bad shape, obscure language—much undecipherable
Talks about:
Birth
Conception
Contraception
Toothaches during pregnancy
7. Hearst Papyrus Named in honor of Phoebe Apperton Hearst, who funded expedition that obtained it in 1901
Was given by a peasant who found it two years earlier and had no use for it
18 pages—several of them ruined by improper care of the peasant
Contains 260 prescriptions
65 oral—81% of which are quantified
Working manual for a local physician in Der-el-Ballas
8. Anatomy & Physiology Had a really good understanding of it for their timeHad a really good understanding of it for their time
9. Some researchers say early physicians worked with embalmers to learn more about human anatomy, but no evidence to support
Most of the known information of human anatomy came from ancient texts that (that predate the medical papyri) of analogies of animal bodies
10. What they knew…. Bones help keep body from collapsing
Body is a system of metu (canals)
Heart is the processing center of these canals, where everything is delivered and received
Also thought to be the center of thought, emotion, and intelligence
Air came in through nose and ears, entered the canals and traveled to the heart
Then went all throughout the body and then out the anus
Canals also carried blood, urine, feces, tears, and sperm
11. What they knew…. Near anus was a collecting tank for everything that was about to leave the body
In this “tank” were things called whdw
Caused no harm unless got back up into the canals, because then would cause disease (kind of like what we know as bacteria)
12. What they knew…. Knew the head was the leader of the body and that the brain was important, but didn’t know what it did
(word “brain” itself found in papyrus writings as early as 3000 BC—first time used in any language)
13. Physicians
14. Medical Kit
15. Swnw—physician Most respected swnws have been hailed as:
“Protector of the Pharaoh”
“Guardian of the Anus”
16. The Heirarchy Overseer of Physicians of Upper and Lower Egypt
Shd swnw—Inspector of physicians
Smsw swnw—Eldest physician
Wr swnw--Chief physician
Imy-r swnw—Overseer of physicians
Swnw--physician
17. Physicians(cont’d) Some physicians worked for the Pharaoh and his palace
Others for nobility and their house
The rest worked for temples, and also served the general public
Payment would be offerings to the temple
Most researchers and Egyptologists agree that many people had free healthcare
18. Sau—magic physicians Treated unknown illnesses
Used spells and incantations to rid people of disease
19. Wab sxmt—priest physicians Discover what god or entity was infecting a person
Attack and destroy
Convince it to leave
Or anything else to cure the patient
20. Priests of Sekhmet Sekhmet—a lioness-goddess who brought death and disease to people who sinned
These priests would treat those she punished
Try to get them forgiven for their sin
These priests also involved in:
Plague prevention
Meat inspection
Veterinary medicine
21. Scientific, magical, religious: totally different fields, weren’t in competition
Specialty also very common: eye, teeth, mouth, khet-stomach diseases, etc
22. Imhotep Physician of King Zoser (3rd dynasty)
Also astronomer, architect, builder of the Stepped Pyramid
Deified as the God of Healing
23. Hesyre Oldest known physician
“Chief of Dentists and Physicians”
“Guardian of the Anus of the Pharaoh”
24. Peseshet Oldest female physician (4th dynasty)
“Lady Overseer of the Lady Physicians”
Ran a peri-ankh--medical school in Sais
25. Clinical Examination Much like modern Western medicine:
Interrogation
Inspection/Palpitation
Percussion
Diagnosis
“Say to the patient: ‘Look at thy shoulder, then thy breast, then look upwards and downwards.’ If he is unable to do this, he is suffering from dislocation of the vertebrae of the neck”
Decision
“An ailment which I will treat…”
“An ailment which I will contend…”
“An ailment which I cannot contend…” Only 3 of 49 Smith papyrus cases were hopeless
Even knew how to check for inguinal hernia: described as a tumor above the genitalia
Can’t feel it, but when patient coughs would reappear—applied heat to restore itOnly 3 of 49 Smith papyrus cases were hopeless
Even knew how to check for inguinal hernia: described as a tumor above the genitalia
Can’t feel it, but when patient coughs would reappear—applied heat to restore it
26. Diseases
27. Dwarfism Common deformity in Egypt, seen in many statues/paintings
Seneb—dwarf whose family was all of normal size. His tomb statue “goes a long way to indicate that dwarfs were accepted members in Egyptian Society”
28. Common Diseases…. Malaria, trachoma, small pox, measles, tuberculosis, cholera, pneumonia, leprosy, arthritis, dementia, malignant tumors, bilharziasis, osteomyelitis, poliomyelitis, kyphosis, cancer,…
And the common cold
29. aaa Edwin Smith Papyrus
Very obscure, like they didn’t know anything about it
Mysterious, like a thief in the night
Many scholars believe it’s a precursor of aids
30. Treatments “Magic is effective together with medicine, and medicine is effective together with magic.”
--Ebers Papyrus
31. Treatments… Human body was born healthy
Only died/became ill because of a foreign agent
With wounds, fractures, etc. the agent was obvious
Prescribed a rational treatment
But internal diseases were from evil gods, divine punishments, or magic spells
First the physician would have to get rid of the supernatural force
then give the actual treatment
32. Fractures Mummies have been found with splints on broken bones that showed signs of healing
33. Surgery Researchers have found a couple mummies with amputations, had healed bone ends
American researchers have found one mummy with a 23 cm screw tying the calf bone to the thigh bone (dates back to the 6th century BC)
34. Circumcision! “The ointment is used to make it acceptable”
35. Surgery(cont’d) Stitches: Ebers papyrus depicts closing of the wound with a needle and thread
Tracheotomy: some researchers believe this is what is depicted in two stone slabs from 3150-2925 BC which show a person kneeling on the ground and another person pointing a sharp instrument at his neck
36. One mummy was found with three artificial teeth fastened to real adjoining teeth with gold wire
Another found with with a loose tooth tied to a neighboring tooth with gold wire Dentistry
37. Cumin, incense, and onion were given to treat swollen gums
Opium was often given to soothe extreme toothaches
Hesi-re—first known dentist (2600 BC)
“Chief of the Toothers”
“Doctor of Teeth” Dentistry
38. Medicine Physical medications (especially herbal) meant to suppress the pain, while magic or the gods provided the actual cure
No pharmacists—physicians decided the medication and dosage
Ingredients were measured relative to each other, by fractions of the whole…
39. The Eye of Horus Myth that the evil god Seth tore out his nephew Horus’ eye in a fight. The god Thoth put it back together.
So the parts of the eye became shorthand for writing fractions of ingredients of drug mixtures
40. Medicine Dosages took into account age/size
“If it is a big child, he should swallow it like a draught, if he is still in swaddles, it should be rubbed by his nurse in milk and thereafter sucked on 4 days”. The timing of administration was not disregarded in a prescription “… and the eye is painted therewith in the evening, its other half is dried, finely ground, and the eye is painted therewith in the morning”. --Smith Papyrus
41. Asthma? Physician would say…
“….. You should then bring 7 stones and heat them on fire. Take one of them, place parts of these drugs(honey, cream, milk, carob, colocynth and date kernels) over it, cover it with a new jar with a pierced bottom. Introduce a tube of reed through this hole and put your mouth on this tube so that you swallow its fumes. The same with every stone … “.
42. Diarrhea? Physician would say…
“Green onions 1/8, freshly cooked Gruel 1/8, oil and honey 1/4, wax 1/16, water 1/3, cook and take for four days”.
43. Herbal Medicines Acacia, Aloe, Basil, Bayberry, Caraway, Dill, Frankincense, Garlic, Henna, Honey, Licorice, Mustard, Myrrh, Onion, Parsley, Mint, Sandalwood, Sesame, Thyme, and Poppy…just to name a few