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1.
Pathog Glob Health ; 117(6): 605-610, 2023 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36458497

RESUMO

One of the most challenging issues with the sources of ancient medicine is to be able to identify the correspondence between the diseases we know today and those reported in ancient medical texts. Ancient diseases' definitions rarely help us, and the symptoms described often correspond to more than one disease. This is especially true about tuberculosis, a disease that historians of medicine habitually associates with the Greek words phthi(n)o (φθίνω), verb, phthisis/phthoe (φθίσις/φθόη), noun, phthinodes/phthisikos (φθινώδης/φθισικός), adjective, all etymologically linked to an Indo-European root that expresses the idea of consumption in a broad sense. This article aims to analyze a group of Greek words, branchos/branchia (ßράγχος/ßράγχια), krauros/kraurao (κραῦρος/κραυράω), and katarreo (καταρρέω), that appear in nosological contexts very close to the infectious disease that today we call tuberculosis. Moreover, the paper aims to focus on the transmission pathways of TB being via animal-human contact and some ancient strategies to cure it. The symptoms, transmission pathways and therapeutic approach of tuberculosis belong to a homogeneous pathological picture that emerges from a set of texts that date back to the period between the fifth century BC and the second century AD.


Assuntos
Tuberculose Pulmonar , Tuberculose , Animais , Humanos , Grécia
2.
Int J Paleopathol ; 40: 41-47, 2023 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36459766

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This paper provides some conceptual guidelines for interpreting the phenomenon of impairment-disability between Antiquity and the Middle Ages from an historical-medical perspective. The paper illustrates application of these guidelines in an historical-medical reassessment of a published paleopathological case-study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The skeletal remains of a woman who experienced bone fusion and osteoarthritis (Rome, VIII century AD) were selected. We first contextualize her impairments through a paleopathological approach, then locate her experience of disability and care within the cultural and social background to which she belongs. RESULTS: This study illustrates the difficulty of reconstructing one consistent single model of disability. CONCLUSIONS: The traditional idea of disability as a parameter of exclusion is not appropriate for every historical context. SIGNIFICANCE: The paper attempts an integrated and transdisciplinary approach to historical reconstruction of lifestyle in the presence of impairments between late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. LIMITATIONS: The main research obstacle is the difficulty of going beyond documented Christian interpretation of disability and provision of welfare to identify detail of lived experience for individuals with impairments. SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH: The transdisciplinary historical-medical approach can be adapted for inclusion in any bioarchaeological study of impairment in historic times; future applications of this model will lead to its refinement.


Assuntos
Pessoas com Deficiência , Estilo de Vida , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Feminino
3.
Ceska Gynekol ; 85(6): 436-439, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33711905

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To analyse own set of molar pregnancies and to develop clinically relevant procedures. TYPE OF STUDY: Historical article based on the analysis of Greek classic medicine. SETTINGS: History of Medicine Unit; Department of Medico-Surgical Sciences and Biotechnologies; Sapienza-University of Rome, Italy; Unit of Medical Humanities; Department of Cardiac, Thoracic, Vascular Sciences and Public Health; University of Padua, Italy. INTRODUCTION: Molar pregnancy is a specific kind of gestational trophoblastic disease which originates from the placenta. There are two types of molar pregnancy, complete and partial. Complete molar pregnancy derives from a defect in maternal eggs, while an incomplete one derives from a defecting fertilization by paternal sperm. Historical analysis: Molar pregnancy drawn the attention of ancient physicians from the classic period and they widely discussed maternal and paternal roles in causing this condition. Classic doctors drawn from mythology several suggestions and ideas, which indicates that the issue of normal and abnormal conception was a crucial problem since the most ancient past Conclusion: Current scientific studies on molar pregnancy are free from ancient prejudices about male and female “nature” and their reciprocal role in embryogenesis. However, an awareness of the cultural biases that could drive scientific researches, might be useful for scientists and physicians even today.


Assuntos
Mola Hidatiforme , Medicina , Neoplasias Uterinas , Feminino , Fertilização , História da Medicina , Humanos , Masculino , Mitologia , Gravidez
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