Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Hauser’s Marks 45 Years With Province-Wide Customer Celebration and Renewed Focus on Community Care
    • Young drivers face elevated collision risks after consuming edible cannabis, new CAA-funded study finds
    • Salvation Army Thrift Store Marks 40th Ontario Location with Peterborough Opening
    • Early Blast of Winter Prompts Safety Warnings from Ontario Road Authorities
    • HONOR Takes Home Two TIME Best Inventions 2025 Awards for Smartphone Breakthroughs
    • Toronto Set to Host Largest LEGO® Fan Event in Canadian History
    • Hank Azaria and Caitlin Morrison Champion Mental Health Through Music at Toronto’s Koerner Hall
    • Bricks in the Six to Build Canada’s Largest-Ever LEGO® Fan Event This November
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Vaughan TodayVaughan Today
    • Home
    • Top News
    • World
    • Banking
    • Explore Canada
    • How to
    • Solutions
    • Contact Form
    Vaughan TodayVaughan Today
    Home»science»The first prostheses were Egyptian
    science

    The first prostheses were Egyptian

    Maria GillBy Maria GillApril 18, 2021No Comments3 Mins Read
    The first prostheses were Egyptian
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Two big lying fingers, one of them found on a mummy ... (Photo: AFP)

    Photo: AFP

    France Media Agency


    Posted Feb 15, 2011 at 11:48 am



    Participation

    Two false toes, one of which is on an Egyptian mummy, may be the first true artificial limb to exist, according to scientists who asked volunteers to verify the correct functioning of replicas of these rare objects.

    A study published Monday by the British Medical Journal indicates that these two Egyptian prostheses dating back to more than 600 BC bore traces of use, signs that they were worn and not just used to restore the physical integrity of the mummies. The scalpel.

    Jacqueline Finch (of the Biomedical Center for Egyptology at the University of Manchester in Great Britain) shows that a wooden and leather prosthesis at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo and another finger on display at the British Museum in London actually helped their patients. Walks.

    “The big toe should hold about 40% of the body weight,” she says, adding that it also plays an important role in pushing forward.

    Dr. Finch recruited two volunteers with amputations of their big right toe to test the use of replicas of these two prostheses: one with two hinged parts of wood and the third probably leather, and the other made of cardboard, which is a type of sticky papier-mâché. And covered with colored plaster. This second prosthesis is called the “Graveyard Chester’s big toe” in honor of the complex that allowed the British Museum to acquire it in 1881.

    “The behavior of the ancient Egyptian false toes was very good,” said Ms. Finch, who said the volunteers wore Egyptian shoes while taking the tests.

    One volunteer was able to walk well with both cardboard prostheses and wooden prostheses, and both volunteers rated the wooden prosthesis design as “particularly comfortable,” according to the study.

    Their approach can be analyzed using cameras and pressure sensors placed on their path.

    Dr. Finch concludes, “My results indicate that these two shapes were able to act as a substitute for the missing finger and that they could then be considered artificial limbs.”

    Therefore, the first steps in this branch of medicine must be attributed to the ancient Egyptians. The science of prosthetics, according to Finch, began to emerge in the Nile Valley, several centuries before the creation of a prosthetic leg dating back to around 300 BC, found in a rich Roman tomb in Santa Maria de Capua and was until then considered the oldest known functional prosthesis.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Maria Gill

    "Subtly charming problem solver. Extreme tv enthusiast. Web scholar. Evil beer expert. Music nerd. Food junkie."

    Related Posts

    Rare Earth Metals: Essential Uses and the Global Supply Chain

    October 4, 2025

    200 meteorites found on Earth could be linked to Martian craters, allowing new insight into Mars’ history

    August 28, 2024

    Antibiotics that reduce the risk of stomach cancer

    August 26, 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.