Excerebration
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2012) |
Excerebration is an
An object more than 6.8 inches long, probably made from plants in the group Monocotyledon (including palm and bamboo), would have been used for liquefying and removing the brain. The instrument would be inserted through a hole punched into the ethmoid bone near the nose via a chisel.[2][3] Some parts of the brain would be wrapped around this stick and pulled out, and the other parts would be liquefied. In order to drain the remaining liquified brain and cerebral fluid the individual would be put on their abdomen or their head would be lifted.[2]
Evolution of Excerebration
Excerebration can be traced back to the
Over the millennia excerebration has changed. In the Old and Middle Kingdoms a transethmoidal excerebration was the standard.[2] With the assistance of modern technology and CT scanning more evidence has arisen as to where in the skull excerebration occurred. Through CT scans it has been determined that over time the transethmoidal approach was shifted towards a transsphenoidal approach.[2] However, there is also evidence of a combined transethmoidal-transsphenoidal excerebration that could have been used in the Third Intermediate Period.[2]
Religious Aspects of Excerebration
In order to extract all organs from the body embalmers would make an incision on the left side of the abdomen. Similar to this, excerebration was rarely ever seen through the right nostril and almost exclusively through the left nostril.[4] Knowing that the body would have been laid with the head to the north all incisions and excerebration would have taken place on the eastern side of the body.[5][4] For convenience and accessibility, it would have been more practical to make incisions on the western side of the body or the right side, however, everything was done on the left side, signifying some degree of symbolism or religion was involved.[4] The notion that the right side was honored, while the left was inferior, is a notion common in ancient Egypt.[4][6] Not only this, but resurrection was also seen as a journey from west to east.[4][7] Therefore, one could infer that it was more honorable and respectful to the deceased if excerebration and the removal of other organs were performed via cuts made on the left or eastern side of the body.
Modern Comparisons
Many[who?] have said that Ancient Egyptians were the first to learn about the brain and document their findings. In fact they were, they have some of the oldest documentation on the spinal cord and the brain in the world.[clarification needed][4] There are also many surgeries that take a very similar approach as excerebration did in the past. Specifically now endoscopic skull base surgery can be seen directly in excerebration with their shared approach transnasally.[clarification needed] Excerebration was an important procedure in Ancient Egypt and even today a version of excerebration can be life saving for some.
See also
References
- ^ translated by A. D. Godley, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1920, through Perseus Digital Library
- ^ PMID 22224784.
- ^ JSTOR 27801609.
- ^ S2CID 162109010.
- ^ J. C. Goyon, 'Chirurgie religieuse ou thanatopraxie? Données nouvelles sur la momification en Égypte et réflec- tions qu'elles impliquent', in Sesto Congresso Internazionale di Egittologia, Atti (Turin, 1992), I, 215-25
- S2CID 163786759.
- JSTOR 27899609.