Abstract
Ancient Egyptian civilization is widely recognized for achievements in architecture, mathematics, and engineering, yet its medical tradition was equally advanced. Medical knowledge was systematically recorded in hieroglyphic inscriptions and papyri, most notably the Edwin Smith and Ebers papyri. These texts provide rare insight into early clinical reasoning, documenting approaches to anatomy, trauma, disease, and treatment with a sophistication unusual for the period. This review examines Egyptian medical practice through primary texts and established Egyptological scholarship, situating these sources within the broader development of medical thought. It also explores how modern tools, including artificial intelligence, natural language processing, and digital imaging can be applied to reanalyze these materials, enabling improved translation, pattern recognition, and reassessment of long-standing interpretations. The Edwin Smith Papyrus offers a structured diagnostic framework based on observation and prognosis, presenting injuries in a case-based format that distinguishes between treatable, manageable, and untreatable conditions. This organization suggests an early form of empirical, evidence-informed decision-making rather than purely ritualized healing. In contrast, the Ebers Papyrus reflects the breadth of Egyptian pharmacology, cataloging hundreds of remedies derived from plant, mineral, and animal sources for a wide range of conditions. Spiritual elements appear alongside practical treatments, indicating an integrated medical system rather than a separation of physical and religious approaches. Recent digital analyses have refined translations and uncovered subtle terminological distinctions, reinforcing the view that Egyptian medicine represented a hybrid system combining empirical observation with cosmological understanding. Studied through contemporary analytical methods, these texts highlight ancient Egypt's foundational role in the development of medical science and suggest avenues for continued interdisciplinary research.