Ancient Egypt and today: enough scourges to go around.
نویسنده
چکیده
362 Letters 5. World Health Organization. Interim proposal for a WHO staging system for HIV infection and diseases. To the Editor: In a recent letter (1), Ablin conjectures that translation of the hieroglyphic symbol for AAA in many ancient Egyptian papyri (Ebers, Berlin, Hearst, London, and Kahum), may be suggesting the existence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or its prototype during the time of the pharaohs. While hieroglyphic interpretations remain challenging, the symbol cited in his letter has most commonly been translated as hematuria (2-4) and has most often been related to schistosomiasis haematobia. This infection, caused by the helminth Schistosoma haematobium, has been shown to have occurred in Egypt from early pharaonic times (3200 B.C.), by the demonstration of schistosome eggs (5) and circulating schistosome antigens (6,7) in mummies. Remedies for hematuria were recorded in papyri from many centuries (9 in Hearst, 11 in Berlin, 20 in Ebers), perhaps implying that the condition was serious and widespread. In giving one of the remedies in the Ebers papyrus (circa 1500 B.C.), the text actually mentions worms in the body (although it seems to state that the worms are caused by AAA disease, perhaps inverting the true order of causality). In the Hearst papyrus one of the remedies cited for hema-turia is antimony disulfide. Until only 25 years ago, antimonial compounds were the most effective drugs for schistosomiasis chemotherapy. It seems likely that, over a period of many centuries in ancient Egypt, AAA disease was a widespread condition of sufficient severity to require medical attention. I concur with many others in proposing that the translation of AAA disease is hematuria, and that the relationship drawn between AAA and worms in the body, antimonial-based remedies, and the knowledge that S. haematobium infections were widely present at that time provide strong evidence that AAA disease refers to schisto-somiasis haematobia. Schistosomiasis is still with us. In fact, through dispersions of both human populations and specific freshwater snails (the intermediate hosts for schistosomes), this disease now infects some 200 million persons and is responsible for an estimated 800,000 deaths per year (8). While clearly ancient, schistosomiasis can emerge as a new infectious disease in a given location under certain man-made changes in environmental conditions and economic-or war-related migrations of people. For example, in the Senegal River basin, estuarine dams, irrigation systems, and an influx of people to work irrigation-intense crops led, over a period of …
منابع مشابه
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Emerging Infectious Diseases
دوره 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1996