"To the United States Government and its politicians, whose faith in science and unflagging support of research have made possible the discoveries described in this book."
Dr. Michael Gershon has devoted his career to understanding the human bowel (the stomach, esophagus, small intestine, and colon). His thirty years of research have led to an extraordinary rediscovery: nerve cells in the gut act as a brain. This “second brain” can control our gut all by itself. Our two brains—the one in our head and the one in our bowel—must cooperate. If they do not, then there is chaos in the gut and misery in the head—everything from "butterflies" to cramps, from diarrhea to constipation. Dr. Gershon’s work has led to radical new understandings about a wide range of gastrointestinal problems including gastroenteritis, nervous stomach, and irritable bowel syndrome. _The Second Brain_ represents a quantum leap in medical knowledge and is already benefiting patients whose symptoms were previously dismissed as neurotic or “it’s all in your head.”
Author(s): Michael D. Gershon
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Year: 1998
Language: English
Pages: 334
Tags: human biology, medicine, stomach, intestine, gastroenterology, neuroscience, peripheral nervous system, vagus nerve, gastrointestinal system, innervation, autonomic ganglia, disease, irritate colon, neurotransmitters, heartburns, ulcers, enteric nervous system, colon, serotonin
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
Part I. The Early Breakthroughs
- Chapter 1. The Discovery of the Second Brain
- Chapter 2. The Autonomic Nervous System and the Story of Chemical Neurotransmission
- Chapter 3. The Turning Point
- Chapter 4 The Workshop
Part II. The Travelogue
- Chapter 5 Beyond the Teeth: The Domain Stalked by Heartburn and Ulcer
- Chapter 6 Onward and Downward
- Chapter 7 “It Ain’t Over ’Til It’s Over”
- Chapter 8 A Bad Bowel
Part III: The Origin of the Second Brain and Its Disorders
- Chapter 9. The Enteric Nervous System Now
- Chapter 10. Immigrants and the Lower East Colon
- Chapter 11. Location, Location, Location
- Chapter 12. The State of the Bowel
- Endnote: Animals in Biomedical Research