According to him, Jesus died of heavy bleeding.
A former consultant neurologist at the University of East Kent, Dr. Patrick Pullichino, who became a monk, said he was able to determine the true cause of Jesus Christ's death. According to him, Christ died from heavy bleeding due to a dislocation of the shoulder caused by the fact that he was carrying a cross. The scientist's findings were published in the Catholic Medical Quarterly and are briefly reported by GBnews. that killed Christ shoulder injury. In the course of his research, he analyzed the information of forensic experts about the Shroud of Turin, in which Jesus is believed to have been wrapped.
Read also: Scientists have called the main version of the decline of Easter Island civilization a myth
The shroud has been kept in the royal chapel of the Cathedral of San Giovanni Battista in Turin since 1578. In the 1980s, the fibers of the Shroud of Turin were subjected to radiocarbon dating, which showed that it was most likely a medieval relic.
so extended from the joint cavity that the right arm was 10 centimeters lower than the left.
According to the doctor, such a dislocation should have led to a rupture of the subclavian artery, which caused heavy bleeding, collapse of the circulatory system and, eventually, death.
was one of the few structures that remained intact, connecting the body and right arm. The transfer of body weight to the hands during inhalation probably caused further dilation of the right subclavian artery. Shifting weight to the legs on the exhale changed this stretch. As a result, the dilated subclavian artery moved along the surface of the rib with each breath, and its lower side was prone to friction, “said Pullicino.
He believes that within three hours the subclavian artery was worn, damaged and thinned the walls until they finally ruptured and caused heavy bleeding.
Earlier, archaeologists excavating in Cambridgeshire discovered the skeleton of a man believed to have been crucified on a cross. >. The remains were found in one of the cemeteries found during the research.