Beethoven’s Genome Reveals Clues to His Bad Health and Early Death

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Beethoven’s Genome Reveals Clues to His Bad Health and Early Death
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The prodigious composer had serious liver problems and a hepatitis infection sometime before he died in 1827.

lead poisoning; previous analysis that suggested as much was based on aThe composer’s death was almost certainly hastened by alcohol abuse. As noted by the researchersone friend allegedly claimed that,“There are metabolic biomarkers of chronic alcohol abuse that survive in hair, particularly one called EtG,” wrote

study lead author Tristan James Alexander Begg in an email to Gizmodo. “Whether these biomarkers can be accurately analyzed, with respect to chronic alcohol consumption, in hair, is a very big unknown, and would likely entail a large-Begg, an archaeogeneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

seven generations later. That interloper provided the Y chromosome that eventually made its way into Ludwig’s genetic code.is undeterminable, the researchers say. Similarly, while the team was able to identity hepatitis B viral DNA in Beethoven’s hair, they were not able to determine when or how the infection occurred.

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