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    Lead Poisoning after all?

    Study Concludes Beethoven Died From Lead Poisoning

    By Rick Weiss
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Tuesday, December 6, 2005; Page A08

    By focusing the most powerful X-ray beam in the Western Hemisphere on six of Ludwig van Beethoven's hairs and a few pieces of his skull, scientists have gathered what they say is conclusive evidence that the famous composer died of lead poisoning.

    The work, done at the Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory outside of Chicago, confirms earlier hints that lead may have caused Beethoven's decades of poor health, which culminated in a long and painful death in 1827 at age 56.


    The source of the composer's exposure to lead remains a mystery.

    "There's no doubt in my mind . . . he was a victim of lead poisoning," said Bill Walsh, an expert in forensic analysis and chief scientist at Pfeiffer Treatment Center in Warrenville, Ill., who led the study with energy department researcher Ken Kemner.

    Still a mystery, however, is the source of Beethoven's lead exposure, which evidence now suggests occurred over many years. Among the possibilities are his liberal indulgence in wine consumed from lead cups or perhaps a lifetime of medical treatments, which in the 19th century were often laced with heavy metals.

    One metal that was clearly absent was mercury, Walsh said -- a detail that weakens the hypothesis floated by some that Beethoven had syphilis, which in those days was commonly treated with mercury.

    "We found zero evidence of that," Walsh said, "so it was nice to exonerate him of that scurrilous possibility." Details of the findings are to be announced today in Argonne, Ill.

    The work was done at Argonne's Advanced Photon Source, a $467 million high-tech facility that sends subatomic particles sailing around a circular half-mile-long track at velocities up to 99.999 percent of the speed of light.

    When electrons are whipped around that tubular tunnel they emit X-rays that are 100 times as bright as the surface of the sun. Scientists can divert those rays toward tiny samples in need of analysis. As those X-rays hit atoms in a sample, they knock other electrons out of place, causing a brief release of energy whose signature is specific to the types of atoms present.

    Many of the atoms in Beethoven's body were lead atoms, it turns out. The hair samples clocked in at 60 parts per million, or about 100 times higher than normal. The bone samples were also extremely high in lead, though technical problems kept the team from getting a precise number for those samples.

    The hair samples were from an authenticated lock of Beethoven's hair purchased by a collector from Sotheby's several years ago. Preliminary studies completed on two of those hairs in 2000 suggested high levels of lead but were not definitive and left open the question of whether they were the result of short-term or chronic exposure.

    Moreover, the method used at that time destroyed the hairs -- an approach the owner was not willing to repeat.

    Argonne's X-ray technique is nondestructive. Moreover, it offered Kemner a chance to further his research, which aims to develop ways to clean up heavy-metal contamination. A major goal is to develop soil-dwelling bacteria that can consume dangerous elements and render them relatively harmless.

    The hairs were the smallest things Kemner had ever analyzed with the X-ray beam. In part because of that success, he has since moved on to measuring heavy-metal levels in individual bacteria, which are 1/100th the diameter of those hairs.

    The skull relics are the property of a California businessman who inherited them through various relatives from his great-great uncle, who was a doctor in Austria. The lead analysis has been complete for more than a year, Walsh and Kemner said in a telephone interview yesterday. But the two were sworn to secrecy until the businessman received the test results comparing the bone DNA to that in the hairs.


    The source of the composer's exposure to lead remains a mystery.

    Those tests, recently completed, came back somewhat short of definitive, but the provenance of the bones is "absolutely clear," said William Meredith, a Beethoven scholar and director of the Center for Beethoven Studies at San Jose State University in California.

    Beethoven developed serious health problems in his early twenties, which grew worse over time and reflected many of the symptoms of lead poisoning, including severe stomach problems.

    The composer was deaf by his late twenties, a problem of questionable relevance because deafness has only rarely been associated with lead poisoning.

    But with his many health problems, it is not hard to imagine that medicine itself may have done him in, Meredith said.

    "He was diagnosed with lots of things, and he was prescribed lots of different treatments." If nothing else, he said, some medicines may have leached the metal from leaded glass medicine bottles.

    Although the new work leaves the question of the lead's source frustratingly unanswered, it is an important contribution, Meredith said.

    "There have been many doctors who have theorized about what ailed Beethoven," he said. "But this is actual science versus interpreting someone else's description of symptoms."

    Cheers,
    Gurn
    Regards,
    Gurn
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    That's my opinion, I may be wrong.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    #2
    Originally posted by Gurn Blanston:
    Study Concludes Beethoven Died From Lead Poisoning

    By Rick Weiss
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Tuesday, December 6, 2005; Page A08

    By focusing the most powerful X-ray beam in the Western Hemisphere on six of Ludwig van Beethoven's hairs and a few pieces of his skull, scientists have gathered what they say is conclusive evidence that the famous composer died of lead poisoning.

    The work, done at the Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory outside of Chicago, confirms earlier hints that lead may have caused Beethoven's decades of poor health, which culminated in a long and painful death in 1827 at age 56.


    The source of the composer's exposure to lead remains a mystery.

    "There's no doubt in my mind . . . he was a victim of lead poisoning," said Bill Walsh, an expert in forensic analysis and chief scientist at Pfeiffer Treatment Center in Warrenville, Ill., who led the study with energy department researcher Ken Kemner.

    Still a mystery, however, is the source of Beethoven's lead exposure, which evidence now suggests occurred over many years. Among the possibilities are his liberal indulgence in wine consumed from lead cups or perhaps a lifetime of medical treatments, which in the 19th century were often laced with heavy metals.

    One metal that was clearly absent was mercury, Walsh said -- a detail that weakens the hypothesis floated by some that Beethoven had syphilis, which in those days was commonly treated with mercury.

    "We found zero evidence of that," Walsh said, "so it was nice to exonerate him of that scurrilous possibility." Details of the findings are to be announced today in Argonne, Ill.

    The work was done at Argonne's Advanced Photon Source, a $467 million high-tech facility that sends subatomic particles sailing around a circular half-mile-long track at velocities up to 99.999 percent of the speed of light.

    When electrons are whipped around that tubular tunnel they emit X-rays that are 100 times as bright as the surface of the sun. Scientists can divert those rays toward tiny samples in need of analysis. As those X-rays hit atoms in a sample, they knock other electrons out of place, causing a brief release of energy whose signature is specific to the types of atoms present.

    Many of the atoms in Beethoven's body were lead atoms, it turns out. The hair samples clocked in at 60 parts per million, or about 100 times higher than normal. The bone samples were also extremely high in lead, though technical problems kept the team from getting a precise number for those samples.

    The hair samples were from an authenticated lock of Beethoven's hair purchased by a collector from Sotheby's several years ago. Preliminary studies completed on two of those hairs in 2000 suggested high levels of lead but were not definitive and left open the question of whether they were the result of short-term or chronic exposure.

    Moreover, the method used at that time destroyed the hairs -- an approach the owner was not willing to repeat.

    Argonne's X-ray technique is nondestructive. Moreover, it offered Kemner a chance to further his research, which aims to develop ways to clean up heavy-metal contamination. A major goal is to develop soil-dwelling bacteria that can consume dangerous elements and render them relatively harmless.

    The hairs were the smallest things Kemner had ever analyzed with the X-ray beam. In part because of that success, he has since moved on to measuring heavy-metal levels in individual bacteria, which are 1/100th the diameter of those hairs.

    The skull relics are the property of a California businessman who inherited them through various relatives from his great-great uncle, who was a doctor in Austria. The lead analysis has been complete for more than a year, Walsh and Kemner said in a telephone interview yesterday. But the two were sworn to secrecy until the businessman received the test results comparing the bone DNA to that in the hairs.


    The source of the composer's exposure to lead remains a mystery.

    Those tests, recently completed, came back somewhat short of definitive, but the provenance of the bones is "absolutely clear," said William Meredith, a Beethoven scholar and director of the Center for Beethoven Studies at San Jose State University in California.

    Beethoven developed serious health problems in his early twenties, which grew worse over time and reflected many of the symptoms of lead poisoning, including severe stomach problems.

    The composer was deaf by his late twenties, a problem of questionable relevance because deafness has only rarely been associated with lead poisoning.

    But with his many health problems, it is not hard to imagine that medicine itself may have done him in, Meredith said.

    "He was diagnosed with lots of things, and he was prescribed lots of different treatments." If nothing else, he said, some medicines may have leached the metal from leaded glass medicine bottles.

    Although the new work leaves the question of the lead's source frustratingly unanswered, it is an important contribution, Meredith said.

    "There have been many doctors who have theorized about what ailed Beethoven," he said. "But this is actual science versus interpreting someone else's description of symptoms."

    Cheers,
    Gurn

    In 1999, Gail Altman in her book *Fatal Links* suggested that Beethoven may have been poisoned. Now, 6 years after publication of her book, the scientific evidence has caught up with her.


    Hofrat
    "Is it not strange that sheep guts should hale souls out of men's bodies?"

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Hofrat:

      In 1999, Gail Altman in her book *Fatal Links* suggested that Beethoven may have been poisoned. Now, 6 years after publication of her book, the scientific evidence has caught up with her.


      Hofrat
      The difference between Gail Altman's wild suggestion that Beethoven was *deliberately* poisoned by enemies that wanted to get rid of this dissident composer and proper painstaking Scientific analysis is vast.
      Scientific chemical study has revealed that Beethoven was poisoned by his own habits and the environment in which he lived.
      Beethoven was fond of fish from the Danube which may also have been polluted with lead. I think we know that Ludwig was a copious wine drinker and that wine then was plumbed with lead to lessen the bitterness, plus all the other attributing factors stated in Gurn's post.
      Therefore, scientific research concludes that the effects of lead ingestion on Beethoven's own day to day living habits were not immediate but slow and cumulative,
      makes perfect sense to me.

      If he was poisoned by enemies as Gail Altman would have it, then would you not think that dear Ludwig would have died sooner ?

      ------------------

      ~ Courage, so it be righteous, will gain all things ~




      [This message has been edited by Amalie (edited 12-09-2005).]
      ~ Courage, so it be righteous, will gain all things ~

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Amalie:
        Beethoven was fond of fish from the Danube which may also have been polluted with lead. I think we know that Ludwig was a copious wine drinker and that wine then was plumbed with lead to lessen the bitterness, plus all the other attributing factors stated in Gurn's post.

        Therefore, scientific research concludes that the effects of lead ingestion on Beethoven's own day to day living habits were not immediate but slow and cumulative,
        makes perfect sense to me.

        If he was poisoned by enemies as Gail Altman would have it, then would you not think that dear Ludwig would have died sooner?

        Dear Amalie;

        Beethoven was not the only person in Vienna who liked fish, or eat from glazed dishes, or drank from metal vessels. There were another 250,000 Viennese at that time. Now if the Danube was so badly polluted as you claim it was, then there would have been an epidemic of chronic lead poisoning of epic proportions in Vienna at that time. Add to that the fact that the practice of "plumbing" wines was stopped because of the ill effects it had on the drinkers then, Beethoven's ingestion of lead from his environment or his life style was very marginal, certainly no higher than the average resident of Vienna.

        So, once you rule out chronic lead poisoning, you are left with acute lead poisoning as the only explanation of the unusually high lead levels in Beethoven's hair and bones. So the question is this: what was the source of this high lead consumption that occurred in the last 10-12 years of Beethoven's life??


        Hofrat
        "Is it not strange that sheep guts should hale souls out of men's bodies?"

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Hofrat:
          So the question is this: what was the source of this high lead consumption that occurred in the last 10-12 years of Beethoven's life??


          Hofrat
          Possibly medication, prescribed by one of the numerous quacks Beethoven visited? My money's on that old padre!

          ------------------
          'Man know thyself'
          'Man know thyself'

          Comment

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