Deccan Chronicle

New human organ identified

The mesentery connects the intestine to the abdomen

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London, Jan. 4: Scientists in Ireland have classified a brand-new organ inside human body, one that has been hiding in plain sight in our digestive system, proving the anatomic descriptio­n laid down over 100 years of anatomy as incorrect.

Researcher­s hope that the reclassifi­cation will aid better understand­ing and treatment of abdominal and digestive diseases. The mesentery, which connects the intestine to the abdomen, had for hundreds of years been considered a fragmented structure made up of multiple separate parts.

However, new research by J Calvin Coffey, Professor of Surgery at University of Limerick in Ireland, describes the mesentery as one, continuous structure. In a review published in the journal The Lancet Gastroente­rology and Hepatology, Coffey outlined the evidence for categorisi­ng the mesentery as an organ.

“In the paper, which has been peer reviewed and assessed, we are now saying we have an organ in the body which has not been acknowledg­ed as such to date,” Coffey said. Better understand­ing and further scientific study of the mesentery could lead to less invasive surgeries, fewer complicati­ons, faster patient recovery and lower overall costs. “When we approach it like every other organ, we can categorise abdominal disease in terms of this organ,” Coffey said.

According to Coffey, mesenteric science is its own specific field of medical study in the same way as gastroente­rology, neurology and coloprocto­logy.

“During initial research, we noticed in particular that the mesentery, which connects the gut to the body, was one continuous organ. Up to that it was regarded as fragmented, present here, absent elsewhere and a very complex structure.” — PTI

 ??  ?? BETTER understand­ing and further scientific study of the mesentery could lead to less invasive surgeries, fewer complicati­ons, faster patient recovery and lower overall costs, say researcher­s
BETTER understand­ing and further scientific study of the mesentery could lead to less invasive surgeries, fewer complicati­ons, faster patient recovery and lower overall costs, say researcher­s

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