Spare Parts: In Praise of Your Appendix and Other Unappreciated Organs

Spare Parts: In Praise of Your Appendix and Other Unappreciated Organs

by Carol Ann Rinzler (Author)

Synopsis

A tribute to the parts we can live without...or can we? This book sheds light on human body parts once considered extraneous but now -- with modern medicine and modern medical paraphernalia -- shown to play an important role in our healthful survival. With wit and research-honed wisdom, health writer Carol Ann Rinzler explains in layman's language why we need bonus body parts such as: The appendix, once discarded as the worm of the intestines, but now believed to play an important role in our immune system The coccyx, a.k.a. the tailbone, once considered the remnant of a human tail, but now considered the keystone of the boney pelvic arch when muscles meet and stabilize our seating Wisdom teeth, that extra set of molars for which many evolved human jaws lack accommodating space but still remain in place where we higher primates still follow a basic hard diet that require extra chew power On the other hand, having highlighted the still-important parts, Rinzler adds a chapter on dispensables: parts with which we can indeed happily dispense. Along the way, Rinzler weaves in Darwin's theories of evolution and shares insights on what the human body may be like millennia from now.

$16.38

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Sky Pony Press
Published: 21 Mar 2017

ISBN 10: 151071250X
ISBN 13: 9781510712508

Media Reviews
Rinzler relishes evoking the senses. . . . The book offers a mesmerizing perspective. There is unparalleled information, both arcane and titillating, like finding out, for example, how the term 'goosebumps' is expressed in 20 foreign languages. --Manhattan Book Review
Author Bio
Carol Ann Rinzler is the author of more than 20 books on health, including Leonardo's Foot, the bestsellers Nutrition For Dummies, 6th edition, and Controlling Cholesterol For Dummies, 2nd edition, and the award-winning Estrogen and Breast Cancer. She wrote a nutrition column for the New York Daily News.