The Asian Age

‘ Mona Lisa may have suffered from hypothyroi­dism’

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Boston: Italian polymath Leonardo da Vinci's muse for Mona Lisa may have suffered from hypothyroi­dism, according to an Indian- origin scientist who studied the features of the worldfamou­s portrait. Mandeep R Mehra, from Brigham and Women's Hospital in the US, summarised the possible medical conditions visible in the portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the woman pictured in Mona Lisa, and proposed his own interpreta­tions. Previous research suggested that skin lesions and hand swellings visible in the portrait may be indicative of a lipid disorder and heart disease. Researcher­s asserted that familial hyperlipid­emia and premature atheroscle­rosis could have caused Lisa Gherardini's death. They also proposed that Mona Lisa's famous smile may have been the result of Bell's palsy. After examining the painting, Mehra said that clinical hypothyroi­dism is a more likely diagnosis given that Lisa Gherardini lived to be 63. Hypothyroi­dism is a condition in which the thyroid gland does not produce enough thyroid hormone. Had she suffered from heart disease, it's unlikely she would have lived to such an advanced age. “The enigma of the Mona Lisa can be resolved by a simple medical diagnosis of a hypothyroi­dismrelate­d illness. In many ways, it is the allure of the imperfecti­ons of disease that give this masterpiec­e its mysterious reality and charm,” said Mehra. The study, published in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s, cited the Mona Lisa's thinning hair, yellow skin, and possible goiter as evidence of hypothyroi­dism.

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