'Why Do Men Have Nipples?'
Answered In New Book
Have you ever wondered why your teeth chatter when you're cold,
or if you could really catch a disease from sitting on a toilet
seat?
New York physician Billy Goldberg, pestered by unusual questions
at cocktail parties and other social gatherings over the years,
puts the public's mind at ease in his book "Why Do Men Have Nipples?"
which hits the book stores on Tuesday.
"It's really remarkable how often you get accosted," said Goldberg,
39. "There are the medical questions from family and friends,
and then there are the drunk and outrageous questions where somebody
wants to drop their pants and show you a rash or something."
The book, subtitled, "Hundreds of Questions You'd Only Ask a
Doctor After Your Third Martini," (Three Rivers Press), is co-authored
by humorist Mark Leyner.
"People tend to know so little about their bodies as compared
to their cars or their laptops," said Leyner, 49, of Hoboken,
New Jersey. "When I worked in a pharmacy in Washington, D.C.,
people would ask me medical questions all the time. I was just
a 22-year-old cashier at Rite Aid."
Chattering teeth is one way the body tries to generate heat.
When the body gets too cold, the area of the brain called the
hypothalamus alerts the rest of the body to begin warming up.
Shivering, the rapid muscle movement that generates heat, then
begins. Teeth chattering represents localized shivering.
During the course of their research, Goldberg and Leyner found
reports of gonorrhea, pinworm and roundworm found on toilet seats
-- but catching something from it isn't common.
The authors discovered that an office setting might be worse
for your health than toilet seats. Charles Gerba, a microbiologist
at the University of Arizona, found the typical office desk harbors
some 400 times more disease-causing bacteria than the average
toilet seat.
Goldberg had compiled a list of nagging questions for several
years before embarking on the book after meeting Leyner. The two
met while working on a short-lived ABC-TV medical drama, "Wonderland,"
in which Leyner served as a writer, while Goldberg was its medical
advisor.
BURNING QUESTIONS
Some of the burning questions answered in the humorous book include
"What causes morning breath?" and "Why do beans give you gas?"
Goldberg says morning breath results from anaerobic bacteria,
the xerostomia (dry mouth) or the volatile sulfur compounds (which
are waste products from the bacteria). Other contributing factors
to foul oral odor includes medication, alcohol, sugar, smoking,
caffeine, and eating dairy products.
Beans contain high percentages of sugars that our bodies are
unable to digest, Goldberg explains. When the sugars make it to
the intestines, bacteria go to work and start producing large
amounts of gas.
And if you're ever bitten by a poisonous snake, sucking at the
bite to remove the poison, as often shown in the movies and on
TV is not only ineffective, but could lead to an infection.
Instead, the bite should be washed with soap and water and immobilized.
The bitten area should also be kept lower than the heart. Medical
help should be sought immediately.
And why do men have nipples?
While only females have mammary glands, we all start out in a
similar way in the embryo, the authors explain. The embryo follows
a female template until about six weeks, when the male sex chromosome
kicks in.
Men, however, have already developed nipples.
Reference
Source 89
August
3, 2005
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|