Was mummified woman really pregnant?

2021 05 03 19 11 4419 2021 05 03 Pregnant Mummy4 20210503190832

An Egyptian expert in CT scans of mummies has called into question whether a mummified woman identified in a Polish museum last year was in fact pregnant, as claimed by authors of an article published in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

In early 2021, Polish researchers from the National Museum in Warsaw published a study based on their scans of what they said was a 25-year-old woman who lived in the Egyptian city of Thebes 3,000 years ago. At the time, they said the mummy was only known case of an embalmed pregnant woman.

But those claims are being questioned by radiologist Dr. Sahar Saleem of Cairo University. She called for the authors of the study to rescan the mummy using proper protocol supervised by a paleoradiologist to clarify the diagnosis of the "pregnant mummy."

A second look could include possible differential diagnoses, such as visceral packs or condensed embalming materials, or a calcified pelvic tumor, Saleem suggested in her comments, published in the January issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science.

"Structures detected by CT in the pelvis of a mummy are usually embalming materials," Saleem wrote.

She noted that the scientific community and public should know that the discovery could be a pseudopregnancy.

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