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Hello Summer!
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2005
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Now people, don't take this the wrong way. Just because she had this disease doesn't mean that smoking and chowing down on cheeseburgers aren't to blame--or that they won't make things worse if they're not to blame. All it means is that such heart problems can't be blamed only and entirely on modern things like smoking and cheeseburgers. Which I think a lot of us already knew (damn genetics!). But this certainly helps confirm it (then again, there were certain weeds to smoke back then, and plenty of lard to eat.....hmmm...).
Full story here.An ancient Egyptian princess who died almost 3,500 years ago has become the earliest documented case of heart disease. And chances are good that cheeseburgers and junk food weren't to blame.
Princess Ahmose Meryet Amon, the daughter of a Pharaoh, likely never had any of the bad habits that plague so many modern-day women like a sedentary lifestyle, smoking, and a fondness for late-afternoon snacking. And yet by the time of her death in her early 40s, she had blockages in five major arteries, including those that supply blood to the brain and heart. Cardiologists have conducted CT scans on the princess's mummified remains and found that she had developed a textbook case of coronary atherosclerosis -- the buildup of plaque in the heart's arteries.
Left untreated -- and hers almost certainly was -- the condition can lead to a heart attack or stroke. In fact, the princess's heart disease was so advanced that if she were living today, she would likely have needed a heart bypass, say the researchers. The findings are surprising, given that many assume heart disease to be a modern scourge. But it's clear that the disease existed thousands of years ago as well.