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Hole in the head

Trepanning is a surgical procedure by which the disc bone of the skull is removed. Now archeologists in Greece have found evidence of this procedure done between 150 - 100 BC.

Excavators were intrigued to find a round hole 1.62 centimeters in diameter to the rear of the skull, in the left parietal bone. Anthropologist Asterios Aidonis, who works with antiquities officials, identified the small opening as the result of a trepanning. As the edges of the bone showed signs of growth and healing, it is believed that the patient survived for five or six years after the operation.

And according to the article this was a procedure practiced for atleast 10,000 years.

[Source: KathiMerini]

Comments (3)

Reminds me of the last scenes of the movie Pi

And what would be the purpose of this barbarity?

JK:

Kingsley, this is a surgical procedure performed to save patients with severe head wounds from death by internal bleeding or infection.

Read this recent article Parkinson?s gene-therapy patient OK and see how the treatment is done.

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