Researchers
at Duke University Medical Center say that the function of the frequently
discarded appendix, an organ often credited with little importance and often
dismissed as having no significant function, does it seems have a role to play
after all.
Researchers in the United
States say the appendix produces and protects good germs for the gut by
"rebooting" the digestive system.
The team of immunologists
at Duke University Medical Center say the human digestive system contains
massive amounts of bacteria most of which are good and help the digestion of
food.
However the researchers
say sometimes the bacteria die off or are purged from the intestines as in
diseases such as cholera or dysentery.
According to the
researchers, the appendix's job is to "reboot" the digestive system
when that happens with the bacteria safely harbored in the appendix.
Many doctors believe the
appendix is a vestigial organ with no function and is no more than a blind
ended tube connected to the cecum, from which it develops embryologically.
The cecum is a pouch-like
structure of the colon and the appendix is near the junction of the small intestine and
the large intestine and
has abundant infection-fighting lymphoid cells, which suggests it plays a role
in the immune system.
The most common diseases
of the appendix (in humans) are appendicitis and carcinoid tumors. Appendix cancer
accounts for about 1 in 200 of all gastrointestinal malignancies.
Appendicitis is a condition where the the
appendix becomes inflamed and in almost all cases it is removed either by
laparotomy or laparoscopy; left untreated, the appendix will rupture, leading
to peritonitis, then shock, and, if
continued untreated, death.
The appendix is routinely removed without
any notable ill effects or side effects and the scientists stress that even though
the appendix seems to have a function, people should still have them removed
when they are inflamed because since leaving it untreated could be fatal.
Dr. Bill Parker, a professor of surgery
and one of the scientists responsible for establishing its status as a useful
organ, says the function of the appendix seems related to the massive amount of
bacteria that populates the human digestive system and where it is located just
below the normal one-way flow of food and germs in the large intestine, helps support that
theory.
The study appears in the online edition
of the Journal of Theoretical Biology.
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