A remarkable case of gout in the Imperial Rome. Surgery and diseases in Antiquity by osteoarchaeological, paleopathological and historical perspectives
This study is the result of a multidisciplinary team approach and focuses on a case of considerable historical and medical interest. The work originally stemmed from findings at a funerary site in the area of Casal Bertone in Rome (Italy), regarding an individual in a tomb identified simply by the number “75”. The skeletal alterations that were later discovered gave rise a debate among the members of the team. Challenges in identifying the pathology have brought historians, anthropologists and radiologists into the field with the use of sophisticated equipment, including CT scans and X‐ray equ ipment, as well as some analyses carried out with the latest spectrometers. Consequently, the most likely diagnostic hypothesis resulted in gout. During this work, each area of study dealt with the problem in a different manner, allowing for a greater understanding of gout at this point in history, how this pathology might have influenced a person's life, as well as the medical approaches and techniques used to treat it in the imperial age of the II century BCE.
Source: International Journal of Osteoarchaeology - Category: Science Authors: Gino Fornaciari,
Silvia Marinozzi,
Daniela Messineo,
Carla Caldarini,
Federica Zavaroni,
Silvia Iorio,
Longo Sveva,
Silvia Capuani,
Paola Catalano,
Valentina Gazzaniga Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research
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