Valverde Guido, Ali Viterman, Durán Pamela, Castedo Luis, Paz José Luis, Martínez Eddy
Instituto de Investigación en Salud y Desarrollo (IINSAD), Calle Claudio Sanjinés s/n, Complejo Hospitalario de Miraflores, La Paz, Bolivia.
Instituto de Investigación en Salud y Desarrollo (IINSAD), Calle Claudio Sanjinés s/n, Complejo Hospitalario de Miraflores, La Paz, Bolivia; Cátedra de Parasitología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Mayor de San Andrés (UMSA), Av. Saavedra 2246, La Paz, Bolivia.
Int J Paleopathol. 2020 Dec;31:34-37. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2020.08.002. Epub 2020 Sep 12.
This study was designed to search for ancient parasites in abdominal content and coprolites from Bolivian mummies.
Twelve mummified individuals from the Andean highlands, housed at the National Museum of Archaeology (MUNARQ) in La Paz, Bolivia.
Microscopic analysis of rehydrated samples (coprolites and abdominal content), following Lutz's spontaneous sedimentation technique.
Eggs of Enterobius vermicularis were identified in coprolites from one mummy, and capillariid eggs in the organic abdominal content from another individual.
This is the first evidence of ancient intestinal parasites in Bolivian mummies.
This pioneering study focused on the search of ancient intestinal parasites in human remains of the Bolivian Andes and contributes to greater knowledge of paleoparasitology in South America.
All mummies in the MUNARQ belonged to the Andean Bolivian highlands (post-Tiwanaku era or Late Intermediate Period), although the exact provenance of the material and the associated contexts are not well recorded.
Considering the great number of well-known archaeological sites and other unexplored sites in Bolivia, in addition to large collections in museums, further paleopathological and paleoparasitological molecular studies in mummies and skeletons are called for.
本研究旨在探寻玻利维亚木乃伊腹部内容物和粪便化石中的古代寄生虫。
来自安第斯高地的12具木乃伊个体,存于玻利维亚拉巴斯的国家考古博物馆(MUNARQ)。
采用卢茨自发沉淀技术对复水后的样本(粪便化石和腹部内容物)进行显微镜分析。
在一具木乃伊的粪便化石中鉴定出蠕形住肠线虫卵,在另一具木乃伊的腹部有机物中鉴定出毛细线虫卵。
这是玻利维亚木乃伊中存在古代肠道寄生虫的首个证据。
这项开创性研究专注于在玻利维亚安第斯山脉的人类遗骸中寻找古代肠道寄生虫,有助于更深入了解南美洲的古寄生虫学。
MUNARQ的所有木乃伊均属于玻利维亚安第斯高地(蒂瓦纳库时代之后或晚期中间期),尽管材料的确切来源和相关背景记录不详。
鉴于玻利维亚有大量知名考古遗址和其他未勘探遗址,以及博物馆中的大量藏品,需要对木乃伊和骨骼进行进一步的古病理学和古寄生虫学分子研究。