Volume 29, Issue 3 p. 236-246
Review

Beginnings—The Kidney and Nephrology in Ancient Mesopotamian Culture

Garabed Eknoyan

Corresponding Author

Garabed Eknoyan

The Selzman Institute of Kidney Health, Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas

Address correspondence to: G. Eknoyan, M.D., Department of Medicine (523-D), Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, Tel.: 798 4748, Fax: 713 790 0681, or e-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
First published: 01 October 2015
Citations: 5

Abstract

A defining period in the history of civilization occurred in ancient Mesopotamia. While some of Mesopotamian contributions to knowledge (writing, mathematics, astronomy) have been recognized, those made to medicine are just beginning to be studied and appreciated. The medicine of the time developed in a theocratic society where local gods controlled all aspects of life and their healers were learned scribes who established the priestly medicine of old. For their use of prayers and incantations as a component of therapy Mesopotamian medicine has been belittled and relegated to magic. In fact, the Mesopotamian healers established the basic medical skills of observation, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment and, over time, systematically produced an expanding corpus of medical knowledge that had not existed theretofore. The kidney as an organ, the components of the urogenital tract, some signs and symptoms of renal diseases, and the art of urinalysis were first conceptualized, studied, and codified in Mesopotamia. In doing so, the Mesopotamians set the foundations of rational medicine that would follow after the introduction of the phonetic alphabet and the Socratic method of questioning and debate to stimulate critical analysis.

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