Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Mummies tell history of a "modern" plague
27 May 2011 [17:54] - Today.Az
Mummies from along the Nile are revealing how age-old irrigation
techniques may have boosted the plague of schistosomiasis, a
water-borne parasitic disease that infects an estimated 200 million
people today.
An analysis of the mummies from Nubia, a former kingdom that was
located in present-day Sudan, provides details for the first time about
the prevalence of the disease across populations in ancient times, and
how human alteration of the environment during that era may have
contributed to its spread.
The American Journal of Physical Anthropology is publishing the
study, led by Emory graduate student Amber Campbell Hibbs, who recently
received her PhD in anthropology. About 25 percent of mummies in the
study dated to about 1,500 years ago were found to have Schistosoma
mansoni, a species of schistosomiasis associated with more modern-day
irrigation techniques.
"Often in the case of prehistoric
populations, we tend to assume that they were at the mercy of the
environment, and that their circumstances were a given," says Campbell
Hibbs. "Our study suggests that, just like people today, these ancient
individuals were capable of altering the environment in ways that
impacted their health."
The study was co-authored by Emory anthropologist George Armelagos;
William Secor, an epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention; and Dennis Van Gerven, an anthropologist at the University
of Colorado at Boulder.
"We hope that understanding the impact of schistosomiasis in the past
may help in finding ways to control what is one of the most prevalent
parasitic diseases in the world today," Campbell Hibbs says.
Schistosomiasis is caused by parasitic worms that live in certain
types of freshwater snails. The parasite can emerge from the snails to
contaminate fresh water, and then infect humans whose skin comes in
contact with the water.
Infection can cause anemia and chronic illness that impairs growth
and cognitive development, damages organs, and increases the risk for
other diseases. Along with malaria, schistosomiasis ranks among the most
socio-economically damaging parasitic diseases in the world.
As far back as the 1920s, evidence of schistosomiasis was detected in
mummies from the Nile River region, but only in recent years did the
analysis of the antigens and antibodies of some of the individuals
become possible.
This latest study tested desiccated tissue samples from two Nubian
populations for S. mansoni. The Kulubnarti population lived about 1,200
years ago, during an era when Nile flooding was at its highest average
known height, and archaeological evidence for irrigation is lacking.
The Wadi Halfa population lived further south along the Nile, about
1,500 years ago, when the average heights of the river were lower.
Archeological evidence indicates that the Wadi Halfa used canal
irrigation to sustain multiple crops.
The analysis of tissue samples showed that 25 percent of the Wali
Halfi population in the study were infected with S. mansoni, while only 9
percent of the Kulubnarti were infected.
The standing water collected by irrigation canals is particularly
favorable to the type of snail that spreads the S. mansoni infection.
Another form of the disease, Schistosoma haematobium, is spread by
snails that prefer to live in more oxygenated, free-flowing water.
"Previously, it was generally assumed that in ancient populations
schistosomiasis was primarily caused by S. haematobium, and that S.
mansoni didn’t become prevalent until Europeans appeared on the scene
and introduced intensive irrigation schemes," Campbell Hibbs says.
“That’s a sort of Euro-centric view of what’s going on in Africa,
assuming that more advanced technology is needed to control the
elements, and that irrigation conducted in a more traditional way
doesn’t have a big influence on the environment."
Co-author George Armelagos is a bioarcheologist who has been studying
ancient Nubian populations for more than three decades. Through
extensive analysis, he and colleagues have shown that nearly 2,000 years
ago the Nubians were regularly consuming tetracycline, most likely in
their beer, at levels high enough to show they were deliberately
brewing the antibiotic effects.
"The Nubians were probably in healthier shape than many other
populations of their time, due to the dry climate, which would reduce
their bacterial load, and because they were getting tetracycline,"
Armelagos says. "But the prevalence of schistosomiasis shown in this
study suggests that their parasite load was probably quite heavy."
/Science Daily/
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