Egyptian
Egyptian
medicine was marked by a mystical approach to healing, as
well as a more empirical or rational approach that was based
on experience and observation. Common diseases of the eyes
and skin were usually treated rationally by the physician
because of their accessible location; internal disorders continued
to be treated by the spells and incantations of the priest-magician.
The
physician emerged around 2600 bc as an early form of scientist,
a type distinct from the sorcerer and priest. The earliest
physician whose name has survived is Imhotep (lived about
2600 bc), renowned for his studies of pathology and physiology
as well as his expertise as a pyramid builder and an astrologer.
The Egyptian physician normally spent years of arduous training
at temple schools in the arts of interrogation, inspection,
and palpation (examining the body by touch). Prescriptions
contained some drugs that have continued in use through the
centuries. Favorite laxatives were figs, dates, and castor
oil. Tannic acid, derived principally from the acacia nut,
was valued in the treatment of burns.
Although
Egyptians practiced embalming to preserve bodies after death,
their knowledge of anatomy was minimal. As a result, they
attempted only minor surgical procedures, with the exception
of trepanning. According to reports of the Greek historian
Herodotus, the ancient Egyptians recognized dentistry as an
important surgical specialty.
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