Researchers say it acts as a safe house for good bacteria, which can be used to effectively reboot the gut following a bout of dysentery or cholera. This more frequently occurs today as a result of antibiotic therapy. It is also a source of endocrine secretions in the human fetus.
The appendix - has no known physiological function in adult humans but probably represents a degenerated portion of the cecum that, in ancestral forms, aided in cellulose digestion. It is believed that the appendix will gradually disappear in human beings as our diet no longer utilizes cellulose.
For years, the appendix was credited with very little physiological function. We now know, however, that the appendix serves an important role in the fetus and in young adults. Endocrine cells appear in the appendix of the human fetus at around the 11th week of development. These endocrine cells of the fetal appendix have been shown to produce various biogenic amines and peptide hormones, compounds that assist with various biological control (homeostatic) mechanisms. There had been little prior evidence of this or any other role of the appendix in animal research, because the appendix does not exist in domestic mammals.
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The appendix.
APPENDIX has no function in our body
The appendix currently serves no useful function in the human body. It is believed that the appendix used to have a useful function, but over the years, the human body has evolved in such a way that the appendix is now extraneous tissue.
The appendix, found at the junction of the small and large intestines, has no known function in digestion. The appendix may also be called the vermiform appendix.
The appendix is an organ that was previously thought to have no function, but recent research suggests it may play a role in immune function.
In humans the appendix is a vestigal organ and has no function that we are currently aware of.
It has no digestive function, yes It is [wrongly] thought to be a vestigial structure. It has recently been brought to Light that the appendix is a storage facility for intestinal flora, that is needed to repopulate the Gut, after some bio-catastrophe depopulates the Gut.
The appendix is anatomically part of the digestion system but its' function is part of the immune system.
appendix
The cecum and appendix in the digestive system serve as reservoirs for beneficial bacteria and aid in immune function.
yes No. In pigs, the cecum has a pouch that holds bacteria that aid in digestion. It is an active part of the digestive system. In humans, it has evolved into a vestigial appendix.
The appendix is said to have no function in the human body, but it actually plays a small role in the lymphatic system.