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Featured researches published by Bruno Frohlich.


The Lancet | 2013

Atherosclerosis across 4000 years of human history: the Horus study of four ancient populations

Randall C. Thompson; Adel H. Allam; Guido P. Lombardi; L. Samuel Wann; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Muhammad Al-Tohamy Soliman; Bruno Frohlich; David T. Mininberg; Janet Monge; Clide M Vallodolid; Samantha L. Cox; Gomaa Abd el-Maksoud; Ibrahim Badr; Michael I. Miyamoto; Abd el-Halim Nur el-din; Jagat Narula; Caleb E. Finch; Gregory S. Thomas

BACKGROUND Atherosclerosis is thought to be a disease of modern human beings and related to contemporary lifestyles. However, its prevalence before the modern era is unknown. We aimed to evaluate preindustrial populations for atherosclerosis. METHODS We obtained whole body CT scans of 137 mummies from four different geographical regions or populations spanning more than 4000 years. Individuals from ancient Egypt, ancient Peru, the Ancestral Puebloans of southwest America, and the Unangan of the Aleutian Islands were imaged. Atherosclerosis was regarded as definite if a calcified plaque was seen in the wall of an artery and probable if calcifications were seen along the expected course of an artery. FINDINGS Probable or definite atherosclerosis was noted in 47 (34%) of 137 mummies and in all four geographical populations: 29 (38%) of 76 ancient Egyptians, 13 (25%) of 51 ancient Peruvians, two (40%) of five Ancestral Puebloans, and three (60%) of five Unangan hunter gatherers (p=NS). Atherosclerosis was present in the aorta in 28 (20%) mummies, iliac or femoral arteries in 25 (18%), popliteal or tibial arteries in 25 (18%), carotid arteries in 17 (12%), and coronary arteries in six (4%). Of the five vascular beds examined, atherosclerosis was present in one to two beds in 34 (25%) mummies, in three to four beds in 11 (8%), and in all five vascular beds in two (1%). Age at time of death was positively correlated with atherosclerosis (mean age at death was 43 [SD 10] years for mummies with atherosclerosis vs 32 [15] years for those without; p<0·0001) and with the number of arterial beds involved (mean age was 32 [SD 15] years for mummies with no atherosclerosis, 42 [10] years for those with atherosclerosis in one or two beds, and 44 [8] years for those with atherosclerosis in three to five beds; p<0·0001). INTERPRETATION Atherosclerosis was common in four preindustrial populations including preagricultural hunter-gatherers. Although commonly assumed to be a modern disease, the presence of atherosclerosis in premodern human beings raises the possibility of a more basic predisposition to the disease. FUNDING National Endowment for the Humanities, Paleocardiology Foundation, The National Bank of Egypt, Siemens, and St Lukes Hospital Foundation of Kansas City.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2011

Ecological divergence and medial cuneiform morphology in gorillas

Matthew W. Tocheri; Christyna R. Solhan; Caley M. Orr; John Femiani; Bruno Frohlich; Colin P. Groves; William E. H. Harcourt-Smith; Brian G. Richmond; Brett Shoelson; William L. Jungers

Gorillas are more closely related to each other than to any other extant primate and are all terrestrial knuckle-walkers, but taxa differ along a gradient of dietary strategies and the frequency of arboreality in their behavioral repertoire. In this study, we test the hypothesis that medial cuneiform morphology falls on a morphocline in gorillas that tracks function related to hallucial abduction ability and relative frequency of arboreality. This morphocline predicts that western gorillas, being the most arboreal, should display a medial cuneiform anatomy that reflects the greatest hallucial abduction ability, followed by grauer gorillas, and then by mountain gorillas. Using a three-dimensional methodology to measure angles between articular surfaces, relative articular and nonarticular areas, and the curvatures of the hallucial articular surface, the functional predictions are partially confirmed in separating western gorillas from both eastern gorillas. Western gorillas are characterized by a more medially oriented, proportionately larger, and more mediolaterally curved hallucial facet than are eastern gorillas. These characteristics follow the predictions for a more prehensile hallux in western gorillas relative to a more stable, plantigrade hallux in eastern gorillas. The characteristics that distinguish eastern gorilla taxa from one another appear unrelated to hallucial abduction ability or frequency of arboreality. In total, this reexamination of medial cuneiform morphology suggests differentiation between eastern and western gorillas due to a longstanding ecological divergence and more recent and possibly non-adaptive differences between eastern taxa.


International Journal of Paleopathology | 2014

Anemia or scurvy: A pilot study on differential diagnosis of porous and hyperostotic lesions using differential cranial vault thickness in subadult humans

Molly K. Zuckerman; Evan Garofalo; Bruno Frohlich; Donald J. Ortner

Metabolic disorders, such as scurvy, manifested in human skeletal remains provide insight into health, nutrition, and environmental quality in past populations. Porous cranial vault lesions are often used to diagnose metabolic conditions in subadult remains, but overlapping gross lesion expressions have led to over-diagnosis of anemia and under-diagnosis of scurvy. Studies by Ortner and colleagues have suggested that specific porous cranial lesions are pathognomonic of scurvy, but additional diagnostic tools are necessary. In this technical report, we offer a preliminary assessment of cranial vault thickness (CVT) at the site of porous lesions (sensu lato porotic hyperostosis, cribra orbitalia) as a method for distinguishing between scurvy and anemia in subadult crania. Computed Tomography (CT) was used to measure CVT at various landmarks associated with porotic hyperostosis and cribra orbitalia, complemented by lesion scores, from scorbutic (N=11), anemic (N=3), and non-pathological (N=28) subadult crania used as a control group. Results indicate that CVT consistently distinguishes scorbutic from non-pathological individuals, while anemic individuals overlap with both - likely a function of small sample size in this study. Despite current limitations, CVT has the potential to be an objective diagnostic tool for distinguishing scurvy and expanding reconstructions of nutritional adequacy over the life course in past populations.


Global heart | 2014

Why Did Ancient People Have Atherosclerosis?: From Autopsies to Computed Tomography to Potential Causes

Gregory S. Thomas; L. Samuel Wann; Adel H. Allam; Randall C. Thompson; David E. Michalik; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Clide M. Valladolid; Gomaa Abd el-Maksoud; Muhammad Al-Tohamy Soliman; Ibrahem Badr; Abd el-Halim Nur el-din; Emily M. Clarke; Ian G. Thomas; Michael I. Miyamoto; Hillard Kaplan; Bruno Frohlich; Jagat Narula; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Albert Zink; Caleb E. Finch

Computed tomographic findings of atherosclerosis in the ancient cultures of Egypt, Peru, the American Southwest and the Aleutian Islands challenge our understanding of the fundamental causes of atherosclerosis. Could these findings be true? Is so, what traditional risk factors might be present in these cultures that could explain this apparent paradox? The recent computed tomographic findings are consistent with multiple autopsy studies dating as far back as 1852 that demonstrate calcific atherosclerosis in ancient Egyptians and Peruvians. A nontraditional cause of atherosclerosis that could explain this burden of atherosclerosis is the microbial and parasitic inflammatory burden likely to be present in ancient cultures inherently lacking modern hygiene and antimicrobials. Patients with chronic systemic inflammatory diseases of today, including systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and human immunodeficiency virus infection, experience premature atherosclerosis and coronary events. Might the chronic inflammatory load of ancient times secondary to infection have resulted in atherosclerosis? Smoke inhalation from the use of open fires for daily cooking and illumination represents another potential cause. Undiscovered risk factors could also have been present, potential causes that technologically cannot currently be measured in our serum or other tissue. A synthesis of these findings suggests that a gene-environmental interplay is causal for atherosclerosis. That is, humans have an inherent genetic susceptibility to atherosclerosis, whereas the speed and severity of its development are secondary to known and potentially unknown environmental factors.


Journal of Cardiology | 2014

Is atherosclerosis fundamental to human aging? Lessons from ancient mummies

Emily M. Clarke; Randall C. Thompson; Adel H. Allam; L. Samuel Wann; Guido P. Lombardi; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Samantha L. Cox; Muhammad Al-Tohamy Soliman; Gomaa Abd el-Maksoud; Ibrahem Badr; Michael I. Miyamoto; Bruno Frohlich; Abdel-Halim Nur el-din; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Jagat Narula; Albert Zink; Caleb E. Finch; David E. Michalik; Gregory S. Thomas

Case reports from Johan Czermak, Marc Ruffer, and others a century or more ago demonstrated ancient Egyptians had atherosclerosis three millennia ago. The Horus study team extended their findings, demonstrating that atherosclerosis was prevalent among 76 ancient Egyptian mummies and among 61 mummies from each of the ancient cultures of Peru, the American Southwest, and the Aleutian Islands. These findings challenge the assumption that atherosclerosis is a modern disease caused by present day risk factors. An extensive autopsy of an ancient Egyptian teenage male weaver named Nakht found that he was infected with four parasites: Schistosoma haematobium, Taenia species, Trichinella spiralis, and Plasmodium falciparum. Modern day patients with chronic inflammatory disease such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and human immunodeficiency virus experience premature atherosclerosis. Could the burden of chronic inflammatory disease have been a risk factor for atherosclerosis in these ancient cultures? The prevalence of atherosclerosis in four diverse ancient cultures is consistent with atherosclerosis being fundamental to aging. The impact of risk factors in modern times, and potentially in ancient times, suggests a strong gene-environmental interplay: human genes provide a vulnerability to atherosclerosis, the environment determines when and if atherosclerosis becomes manifest clinically.


Global heart | 2014

Genomic correlates of atherosclerosis in ancient humans.

Albert Zink; L. Samuel Wann; Randall C. Thompson; Andreas Keller; Frank Maixner; Adel H. Allam; Caleb E. Finch; Bruno Frohlich; Hillard Kaplan; Guido P. Lombardi; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Michael I. Miyamoto; Jagat Narula; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Gregory S. Thomas; Johannes Krause

Paleogenetics offers a unique opportunity to study human evolution, population dynamics, and disease evolution in situ. Although histologic and computed x-ray tomographic investigations of ancient mummies have clearly shown that atherosclerosis has been present in humans for more than 5,000 years, limited data are available on the presence of genetic predisposition for cardiovascular disease in ancient human populations. In a previous whole-genome study of the Tyrolean Iceman, a 5,300-year-old glacier mummy from the Alps, an increased risk for coronary heart disease was detected. The Icemans genome revealed several single nucleotide polymorphisms that are linked with cardiovascular disease in genome-wide association studies. Future genetic studies of ancient humans from various geographic origins and time periods have the potential to provide more insights into the presence and possible changes of genetic risk factors in our ancestors. The study of ancient humans and a better understanding of the interaction between environmental and genetic influences on the development of heart diseases may lead to a more effective prevention and treatment of the most common cause of death in the modern world.


Global heart | 2014

Computed tomographic evidence of atherosclerosis in the mummified remains of humans from around the world.

Randall C. Thompson; Adel H. Allam; Albert Zink; L. Samuel Wann; Guido P. Lombardi; Samantha L. Cox; Bruno Frohlich; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Thomas C. Frohlich; Samantha I. King; Michael I. Miyamoto; Janet Monge; Clide M. Valladolid; Abd el-Halim Nur el-din; Jagat Narula; Adam Thompson; Caleb E. Finch; Gregory S. Thomas

Although atherosclerosis is widely thought to be a disease of modernity, computed tomographic evidence of atherosclerosis has been found in the bodies of a large number of mummies. This article reviews the findings of atherosclerotic calcifications in the remains of ancient people-humans who lived across a very wide span of human history and over most of the inhabited globe. These people had a wide range of diets and lifestyles and traditional modern risk factors do not thoroughly explain the presence and easy detectability of this disease. Nontraditional risk factors such as the inhalation of cooking fire smoke and chronic infection or inflammation might have been important atherogenic factors in ancient times. Study of the genetic and environmental risk factors for atherosclerosis in ancient people may offer insights into this common modern disease.


Global heart | 2014

Funerary Artifacts, Social Status, and Atherosclerosis in Ancient Peruvian Mummy Bundles☆

M. Linda Sutherland; Samantha L. Cox; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Clide M. Valladolid; Caleb E. Finch; Albert Zink; Bruno Frohlich; Hillard Kaplan; David E. Michalik; Michael I. Miyamoto; Adel H. Allam; Randall C. Thompson; L. Samuel Wann; Jagat Narula; Gregory S. Thomas; James D. Sutherland

BACKGROUND Evidence of atherosclerotic plaques in ancient populations has led to the reconsideration of risk factors for heart disease and of the common belief that it is a disease of modern times. METHODS Fifty-one wrapped mummy bundles excavated from the sites of Huallamarca, Pedreros, and Rinconada La Molina from the Puruchuco Museum collection in Lima, Peru, were scanned using computed tomography to investigate the presence of atherosclerosis. Funerary artifacts contained within the undisturbed mummy bundles were analyzed as an attempt to infer the social status of the individuals to correlate social status with evidence of heart disease in this ancient Peruvian group. This work also provides an inventory of the museum mummy collection to guide and facilitate future research. RESULTS Statistical analysis concluded that there is little association between the types of grave goods contained within the bundles when the groups are pooled together. However, some patterns of artifact type, material, atherosclerosis, and sex emerge when the 3 excavation sites are analyzed separately. CONCLUSIONS From the current sample, it would seem that social class is difficult to discern, but those from Huallamarca have the most markers of elite status. We had hypothesized that higher-status individuals may have had lifestyles that would place them at a higher risk for atherogenesis. There seems to be some indication of this within the site of Huallamarca, but it is inconclusive in the other 2 archeological sites. It is possible that a larger sample size in the future could reveal more statistically significant results.


Global heart | 2014

Atherosclerosis in Ancient and Modern Egyptians: The Horus Study

Adel H. Allam; Mohamed A. Mandour Ali; L. Samuel Wann; Randall C. Thompson; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Bruno Frohlich; David E. Michalik; Albert Zink; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Caleb E. Finch; Michael I. Miyamoto; Sallam L. Sallam; Jagat Narula; Gregory S. Thomas

BACKGROUND Although atherosclerosis is usually thought of as a disease of modernity, the Horus Team has previously reported atherosclerotic vascular calcifications on computed tomographic (CT) scans in ancient Egyptians. OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to compare patterns and demographic characteristics of this disease among Egyptians from ancient and modern eras. METHODS We compared the presence and extent of vascular calcifications from whole-body CT scans performed on 178 modern Egyptians from Cairo undergoing positron emission tomography (PET)/CT for cancer staging to CT scans of 76 Egyptian mummies (3100 bce to 364 ce). RESULTS The mean age of the modern Egyptian group was 52.3 ± 15 years (range 14 to 84) versus estimated age at death of ancient Egyptian mummies 36.5 ± 13 years (range 4 to 60); p < 0.0001. Vascular calcification was detected in 108 of 178 (60.7%) of modern patients versus 26 of 76 (38.2%) of mummies, p < 0.001. Vascular calcifications on CT strongly correlated to age in both groups. In addition, the severity of disease by number of involved arterial beds also correlated to age, and there was a very similar pattern between the 2 groups. Calcifications in both modern and ancient Egyptians were seen peripherally in aortoiliac beds almost a decade earlier than in event-related beds (coronary and carotid). CONCLUSIONS The presence and severity of atherosclerotic vascular disease correlates strongly to age in both ancient and modern Egyptians. There is a striking correlation in the distribution of the number of vascular beds involved. Atherosclerotic calcifications are seen in the aortoiliac beds almost a decade earlier than in the coronary and carotid beds.


Global heart | 2014

Atherosclerosis: a longue durée approach.

L. Samuel Wann; Randall C. Thompson; Adel H. Allam; Caleb E. Finch; Albert Zink; Bruno Frohlich; Hillard Kaplan; Guido P. Lombardi; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Michael I. Miyamoto; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Jagat Narula; Gregory S. Thomas

q This is an open access article under the CC BY-NCND license (http:// creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). The authors report no relationships that could be construed as a conflict of interest. From the *Cardiovascular Physicians, Columbia St. Mary’s Healthcare, Milwaukee, WI, USA; ySaint Atherosclerosisq A Longue Durée Approach L. Samuel Wann*, Randall C. Thompsony, Adel H. Allamz, Caleb E. Finchx, Albert Zinkk, Bruno Frohlich{, Hillard Kaplan, Guido P. Lombardi**, M. Linda Sutherlandyy, James D. Sutherlandzz, Lucia Watsonxx, Samantha L. Coxkk,Michael I.Miyamoto{{, Alexandre F. R. Stewart, JagatNarula***, Gregory S.Thomasyyy,zzz

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Randall C. Thompson

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Caleb E. Finch

University of Southern California

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Jagat Narula

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Guido P. Lombardi

Cayetano Heredia University

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David E. Michalik

Boston Children's Hospital

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