BackgroundLeprosy is a chronic infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae that affects almost 250,000 people worldwide. The timing of first infection, geographic origin, and pattern of transmission of the disease are still under investigation. Comparative genomics research has suggested M. leprae evolved either in East Africa or South Asia during the Late Pleistocene before spreading to Europe and the rest of the World. The earliest widely accepted evidence for leprosy is in Asian texts dated to 600 B.C.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe report an analysis of pathological conditions in skeletal remains from the second millennium B.C. in India. A middle aged adult male skeleton demonstrates pathological changes in the rhinomaxillary region, degenerative joint disease, infectious involvement of the tibia (periostitis), and injury to the peripheral skeleton. The presence and patterning of lesions was subject to a process of differential diagnosis for leprosy including treponemal disease, leishmaniasis, tuberculosis, osteomyelitis, and non-specific infection.Conclusions/SignificanceResults indicate that lepromatous leprosy was present in India by 2000 B.C. This evidence represents the oldest documented skeletal evidence for the disease. Our results indicate that Vedic burial traditions in cases of leprosy were present in northwest India prior to the first millennium B.C. Our results also support translations of early Vedic scriptures as the first textual reference to leprosy. The presence of leprosy in skeletal material dated to the post-urban phase of the Indus Age suggests that if M. leprae evolved in Africa, the disease migrated to India before the Late Holocene, possibly during the third millennium B.C. at a time when there was substantial interaction among the Indus Civilization, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. This evidence should be impetus to look for additional skeletal and molecular evidence of leprosy in India and Africa to confirm the African origin of the disease.
The s i t e and i t s ecological settingThe s i t e of Bhimbetka ( 7 7 O 3 7 '~: 2 2 O 5 0 '~) is l o c a t e d o n t h e n o r t h e r n margin of t h e Vindhya H i l l s i n t h e Raisen D i s t r i c t of Madhya Pradesh ( F i g . 1 ) .The Vindhyas r u n p a r a l l e l t o t h e Narmada river on i t s n o r t h e r n s i d e . Though i n t h e main t h e y c o n s i s t of Deccan l a v a s , between Bhopal and I t a r s i they are composed of sands t o n e s . The h i l l s form a g r e a t s c a r p o v e r l o o k i n g t h e Narmada valley and r a r e l y exceed a h e i g h t o f 610 m (2000 f t ) .Near Bhimbetka t h e
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.