News | December 01, 2009

Study Reveals Evidence of Heart Disease in Ancient Egyptian Mummies

Mummy CT scans.

November 17, 2009 — The recent discovery of 3,500-year-old Egyptian mummies showing signs of hardening of the arteries indicates that heart disease is not just a condition found in modern humans as commonly believed.

A cardiologist at Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute and his research colleagues from Cairo, Milwaukee and Mission Viejo, Calif., made the discovery. The research appears in the November 18th issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Randall Thompson, M.D., a cardiologist at Saint Luke’s, and collaborating imaging experts, Egyptologists and preservationists, examined direct evidence collected using a Siemens six-slice computed X-ray tomography on 22 mummies in the Museum of Antiquities in Cairo, Egypt. The mummies dated from 1981 B.C. to 364 A.D. All were of high social status, including priests and members of the pharaoh’s household.

Atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, is the disease that causes heart attacks and strokes, and is commonly associated with modern risk factors like obesity, sedentary lifestyles, smoking, stress and high-fat diets. Atherosclerosis often causes arteries to become calcified, and this change is readily apparent on CT scans. Since the diet and lifestyles of ancient people are quite different from modern man, the investigators were surprised to find that atherosclerosis was so frequently seen. Sixteen mummies had identifiable arteries or hearts and of those, nine had calcification in the artery wall or path where the artery should have been.

Calcification was evenly discovered in male and female mummies, and more common in mummies thought to be 45 years or older at the time of death. It is thought that diet included grain, game, domesticated animals and fish. Salt was often used for preservation.

“While the presence of calcification does not demonstrate that atherosclerosis was a common cause of disease or death, it does provide evidence that humans in ancient times had the genetic predisposition and environment to promote the development of atherosclerosis,” said Dr. Thompson. “This study may begin to shed light on the relative importance of modern risk factors in causing hardening of the arteries. We all may be at risk for atherosclerosis, but it should be emphasized there is much we can do to minimize its extent and severity.”

For more information: http://pubs.ama-assn.org, www.saint-lukes.org

 

Related Mummy and Archological Cardiology Content:

Mummy CT Scans Show No Significant Differences in Atherosclerotic Disease in Modern vs. Ancient Egyptians

Mummies Reveal Hardening of the Arteries was a Problem in the Ancient World

Egyptian Mummies Show Earliest Cases of Coronary Disease on CT

Mummy’s Secrets No Longer Under Wraps Thanks to 3-D CT

Imaging Yields Evidence of Heart Disease in Archeological Find


Related Content

News | Cardiac Imaging

March 16, 2026 — The American Society for Preventive Cardiology (ASPC) will host its 2026 Virtual Imaging Symposium, a ...

Home March 17, 2026
Home
Feature | Cardiac Imaging

Sponsored Content — According to the American Heart Association, cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in ...

Home March 13, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

March 6, 2026 — Building on its leadership in cardiac MR, Philips has received FDA 510(k) clearance for SmartHeart, an ...

Home March 09, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Feb. 26, 2026 — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has given 510(k) class II clearance of qXR-Detect, the ...

Home February 26, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Feb. 13, 2026 — Conavi Medical Corp. recently highlighted the publication of new peer-reviewed research titled “Deep ...

Home February 16, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 27. 2026 — Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc. has announced the release of cvi42 v6.4, the latest version of its ...

Home January 28, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 6, 2026 — UltraSight, a provider of AI-guided cardiac imaging workflows, has announced FDA clearance to expand its ...

Home January 16, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 12, 2026 — YorLabs, Inc., a medical technology company providing next-generation intracardiac imaging solutions for ...

Home January 13, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 7, 2026 — UltraSight, a provider of AI-guided cardiac imaging workflows, has partnered with Jefferson Health, one ...

Home January 08, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Dec. 12, 2025 — Increased volume of epicardial adipose tissue, detected by cardiovascular imaging, was found to be ...

Home January 02, 2026
Home
Subscribe Now