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It was the first day of spring break in 1992 in Phoenix, and 12-year-old Heather Smith was excited for her family's upcoming ski trip.
But before Smith and her family had even packed their snow pants, she realized she didn't feel good. "I woke up feeling just a little bit nauseous, and I wasn't sure why. Throughout the course of the day, I started to feel worse and worse and started to develop pain in the abdomen," she says.
By about midafternoon, her father took her to urgent care. She ended up getting emergency surgery to have her appendix out.
Smith still has a small scar from the appendectomy. And after the surgery, she found herself intrigued by the part of her body she had so suddenly lost. "It inspired me to wonder: Why do we have this weird little organ in the first place? What does it do? Why does it get inflamed?"
Smith grew up to be a professor of anatomy at Midwestern University and editor-in-chief of a journal called
The Anatomical Record. And all these decades later, Smith has made a mark in the field by studying the very organ that threw off her family's vacation plans in 1992.
She acknowledges that
the appendix has a bad rap as a useless organ that can cause you pain and require emergency surgery. "But it turns out recent research shows it does have functions that can help us," she says.
NPR's Short Wave spoke to Smith about what the appendix is good for and how a future where
appendicitis can be prevented or treated without emergency surgery could be on the way.
This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Comment: Notably, it seems that those countries who used the highly experimental mRNA covid jabs are those that seem to be suffering the highest excess mortality, unusual spates of people who 'died suddenly', alongside soaring levels of various other side effects.
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