Appendix Might Be Useful After All
Could Act as a 'Safe House' for Good Bacteria
By Shirley Gregory, published Oct 08, 2007
Published Content: 372 Total Views: 85,613 Favorited By: 17 CPs
Researchers William Parker, assistant professor of experimental surgery, and R. Randal Bollinger, Duke professor emeritus in general surgery, reached that conclusion after assembling information from a series of experiments and observations involving the human intestine. Rather than being useless or vestigial, the appendix could help the digestive system bounce back to health after a violent bout of diarrhea that clears out the gut's good bacteria, they found.
"While there is no smoking gun, the abundance of circumstantial evidence makes a strong case for the role of the appendix as a place where the good bacteria can live safe and undisturbed until they are needed," said Parker.
A two- to four-inch-long pouch near the point where the small and large intestines meet, the appendix has long been a kind of mystery organ. Physicians have known that there's immune system tissue in the appendix, but have been unable to determine what exactly the appendix' function is. The mystery has only been heightened by years of experience showing people suffer no apparent ill effects after their appendix is removed.
Writing in the online Journal of Theoretical Biology, Parker and Bollinger theorize that the appendix's immune system tissues might help protect the beneficial intestinal bacteria we need to properly digest food. If a severe illness clears out the intestinal tract's contents, a reserve of good bacteria safely hidden in the appendix might help repopulate the gut afterward, they believe.
In countries lacking modern health care and proper sanitation, people often contract diseases causing severe diarrhea. In those cases, the appendix might serve a critical function in restoring health, Parker and Bollinger speculate. Because such devastating intestinal illnesses are uncommon in the developed world, the appendix doesn't seem to be as important to our health.
Appendix Might Be Useful After All
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USA
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Takeaways
- The appendix is a two- to four-inch-long pouch near where the small and large intestines meet.
- Physicians have long been unable to find a purpose for the appendix, and people do well without one.
- The only mammals to have appendices are humans, rabbits, opossums and wombats.
Resources
- Duke University Medical Center at www.dukemednews.org
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