Individual and Family Discount Dental Plans, Affordable
Dental Care Starting at $79.95 a Year!
1-888-632-5353 
M-F 8 AM - 9 PM EST 

Find Plans in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 

Find Dentists in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 
Dentist last name
(optional)
 




you are here: DentalPlans.com > Dental Health Articles > Gastrointestinal Health > Stomach Cancer Was Napoleon's Waterloo Study

Stomach Cancer Was Napoleon's Waterloo: Study
And today's treatments wouldn't have kept him alive, researchers contend
By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter
Updated: 4/26/2007 3:26:46 PM
 

FRIDAY, Jan. 19 (HealthDay News) -- An international team of medical experts has issued a new verdict in the case of the long-debated death of Napoleon Bonaparte: The French leader died of stomach cancer, not poison, and even modern medicine couldn't have kept him alive.

Other medical historians have come to the same conclusion regarding the cause of death. But the team's new report may be the first to examine Napoleon's illness from the perspective of today's cancer treatment.

"He would have been unlikely to be saved, even if he had been seen at Sloan-Kettering today," said study senior author Robert Genta, chief of pathology at the VA North Texas Health Care System and a professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas. "It was basically a terminal type of cancer."

Napoleon's death at the age of 52 has long fascinated historians, especially because of the possibility that he was murdered, robbing him of a chance to return to power. His death in 1821 came on the island of St. Helena in the south Atlantic, after he was exiled there following the French defeat at Waterloo.

Some historians have argued that Napoleon was assassinated through arsenic poisoning, while others have suggested his doctors inadvertently bumped him off by relying on dangerous treatments.

But the stomach cancer theory has plenty of support, especially considering the results of an autopsy and the fact that Napoleon's father may have died of the disease.

With Canadian and Swiss colleagues, Genta examined the Napoleon autopsy findings, eyewitness reports and the memoirs of attending doctors. They report their findings in the January issue of Nature Clinical Practice Gastroenterology & Hepatology.

The medical records indicate that Napoleon had extensive tumor growth and blood in his stomach. According to the new study, this suggests that the former emperor suffered from stomach cancer -- also known as gastric cancer -- in its later stages and died of stomach hemorrhaging.

Napoleon's cancer couldn't be easily treated today, the researchers found. The level of tumor growth was so severe that anyone with a similar diagnosis would have only a 20 percent chance of living five years after treatment with chemotherapy and surgery, Genta said.

Indeed, stomach cancer remains extremely deadly almost two centuries after Napoleon's death. According to Genta, it's a leading cause of death in Japan and South America.

Despite medical advances, stomach cancer remains hard to detect in its early stages and spreads rapidly throughout the body even when tumors are small, Genta said.

Some experts have blamed doctors for Napoleon's death, and Genta said it's quite possible they were anything but helpful. "All doctors in those days made things worse by giving people drugs that were more toxic than the disease," he said.

A possible family history of stomach cancer could have boosted Napoleon's risk of developing the disease. But the study authors pointed a finger at his diet.

According to Genta, the salted meat eaten by soldiers of the time could have harbored a bacterium that causes stomach cancer. Napoleon's medical history, Genta said, suggests he was infected by the germ.

If Napoleon had lived, he could have conceivably returned to power in France during a crisis in 1830, said Howard G. Brown, professor of history at State University of New York, Binghamton.

If that had happened, "there's little doubt that he would have pursued French expansion once again," Brown said. "It was in his blood, and it had always been his biggest source of legitimacy."

And that could have had a huge effect on the modern world, Brown said. "Had France captured and hung on to the Middle East until the oil age, it would have been more important to them than India was to Britain. Furthermore, with Middle East oil, France would have dominated the first half of the 20th century at least."

Despite the new findings, no one expects the debate over Napoleon's demise to die down.

The controversy is "a typical case of people looking for exotic causes of death of extraordinary people," said Dr. Philip Mackowiak, chief of the medical service at VA Maryland Health Care system, and host of an annual conference on the cause of death of a famous person. "Gastric cancer, to their way of thinking, would just be too ordinary a diagnosis to have dispatched Napoleon."

More information

Learn more about Napoleon's death and a poisoning theory from The Victorian Web.

SOURCES: Robert Genta, M.D., chief of pathology, VA North Texas Health Care System and a professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas; Howard G. Brown, D.Phil., professor of history, State University of New York, Binghamton; Philip Mackowiak, M.D., chief, medical service, VA Maryland Health Care System, Baltimore; January 2007, Nature Clinical Practice Gastroenterology & Hepatology

Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

Customer Care - 1-888-632-5353 Toll Free

  
Additional Articles
Entereg Helps Restore Post-Operative...
Health Tip: Treating an Ulcer
FDA OKs New Rotavirus Vaccine
Rotarix Approved to Treat Rotavirus in...
IBS Symptoms More Acute in Women With...
Harnessing the Mind to Manage Irritable...
Vaccine Could Cut Bouts With Stomach...
Toy Magnets Can be a Very Real Threat
Health Tip: Belching and Bloating
Health Tip: Foods That Cause Gas
Reflux Problems Not Limited to Adults
Study Reveals E.Coli's Grip on Gut
Chronic Reflux Often Leads to Sleepless...
Reflux Can Precipitate Chest Pain,...
Chronic GI Troubles Keep Workers Off...
Scientists Map Intestinal Bug's Genome
GERD Not Limited to Grownups
Health Tip: Don't Aggravate an Upset...
Pet Turtles Pose Salmonella to...
Wireless System Tracks Esophageal...
Stenting Abdominal Arteries Relieves...
Handling Pet Treats Can Cause Human...
Fair Warning May Ease Nausea
Health Tip: Calming an Upset Stomach
Researchers Explore Psychological Link...
2 Procedures Equal for Preemie Bowel...
Health Tip: Avoiding a Hernia
Health Tip: Taking Care of Your Ulcer
Give Heartburn the Heave-Ho
Tempting Holiday Treats Can Be Hard to...
Celiac Disease Raises Tuberculosis Risk
Health Tip: What's Responsible for...
Diverticulitis Showing Up in Young,...
Low Birth Weight Ups Risk of Irritable...
Intestinal Protein May Help Fight...
Ulcer Bug With Humans for 60,000 Years
Score Against Heartburn This Super Bowl...
Stomach Cancer Was Napoleon's Waterloo:...
Colazal Sanctioned for Pediatric...
HIV-Infected Intestinal Immune Cells...

Add to Google MSN Gastrointestinal Health
 Add Gastrointestinal Health
 To My Yahoo  Subscribe with Bloglines   Subscribe in NewsGator Online Gastrointestinal Health
 News Feed

The materials and articles published on DentalPlans.com are for informational purposes only. Although DentalPlans.com strives to be accurate and complete, the information is provided without liability for errors. DentalPlans.com does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of the information, text graphics, links, or other items contained on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims liability for errors or omissions in these materials and DentalPlans.com makes no commitment to update the information on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims all liability for the use or interpretation by others of information on DentalPlans.com. Decisions based on information contained on DentalPlans.com are the sole responsibility of the visitors, and visitors agree to hold DentalPlans.com and its Affiliates harmless against any claims for damages arising from decisions visitors make on such information.

Nothing on DentalPlans.com constitutes medical advice or other forms of advice. DentalPlans.com assumes no responsibility for material created or published by third parties linked to DentalPlans.com with or without DentalPlans.coms knowledge.

Let's Get Connected
Like Us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter DentalPlans.com Blog, Dental Insurance Alternatives View Our YouTube Channel
Email Me Savings & Updates
Submit
Privacy Policy
The DENTALPLANS.COM website is administered by DENTALPLANS.COM, INC., a licensed Florida Discount Medical Plan Organization, 8100 S.W. 10th Street Suite #2000, Plantation, FL 33324. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com are not health insurance policies. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com provide discounts at certain health care providers for medical services. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com do not make payments directly to the providers of medical services. The Plan or Program member is obligated to pay for all health care services but will receive a discount from those health care providers who have contracted with the Plan, Program or discount plan organization.
Special promotions including but not limited to additional months free and Membership Rewards® points from American Express are not available to California residents.

© 1999-2011 DentalPlans.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Patents Pending. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida is an Independent Licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
BBB Rating A+    McAfee SECURE sites help keep you safe from identity theft, credit card fraud, spyware, spam, viruses and online scams