
30 Doctors Reveal The Most Baffling Things About The Human Body They Have No Answers For
In his wonderfully rich book Medieval Bodies: Life, Death and Art in the Middle Ages, Dr. Jack Hartnell shows that the era wasn't as ignorant or stagnant as we often assume but acknowledges that, at times it was pretty wild. Feeling sad? Come get your blood drawn.
However, a few hundred years later, we still don't have all the answers. Far from it. When Reddit user Immediate_Hair_3393 asked all health professionals on the platform to share the questions that are still puzzling us, they were flooded with responses!
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How basically any of medical science works in relation to women and their bodies - almost all the data is based on men, and a lot of it almost exclusively.
We asked Iris Gorfinkel, M.D. who is a general practitioner, medical researcher, and the founder of PrimeHealth Family Practice and Clinical Research, to share her thoughts on the topic, and she told Bored Panda, "If I had one wish, it would be that the world unifies to fight the globe's biggest issues."
"This takes a lot of cooperation and it is a big wish to fight climate change, the loss of ecosystems, to begin understanding that the animal world is not separate from the human one. All of our health—the humans', animals', and plants'—is actually interlinked."
One of the frustrating, but not so secret things in medicine is that racial differences exist and they can't be discussed in today's climate.
There are differences in d**g efficacy, growth, disease susceptibility or immunity just about everything.
It's preventing personalized treatments. AI can now pretty accurately guess someone's race and s*x from a single view chest xray so things may change.
People always think of this as a negative but in reality it should be approached like family history being super relevant for cancer or heart disease surveillance.
In MS and related disorders we study the geographic origin, which can be different from ethnicity, but it's a reliable data. Studies have shown different disease patterns in different populations. It's a very interesting insight to have on healthcare in general and specific diseases in particular.
I’m an anesthesiologist. We still don’t really know why inhaled volatile anesthetics like sevoflurane, the principle anesthetic agent used to maintain general anesthesia, work. We kind of have an idea of maybe how it happens, but really we don’t know
It’s commonly said in my field that whoever figures this out will win the next Nobel prize in medicine
According to Gorfinkel, "If we're to prevent the next pandemic or if we're to successfully fight antibiotic resistance and make sure the world has food and that food is safe, it cannot be done without cooperation."
"This integrated approach is not something new; it's under the World Health Organization's One Health plan," she said.
The Gut Microbiome: While it's well-known that the gut plays a huge role in digestion, researchers are discovering just how much our gut bacteria affect other parts of our health, like mood, immunity, and even brain function.
One of the few ABSOLUTES in medical science is that nobody born blind has ever developed schizophrenia.
While health, food, water, energy, and environment are all wide topics with sector-specific concerns, the WHO highlights that our collaboration across sectors and disciplines does contribute to addressing health challenges such as the emergence of infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and food safety and promote the health and integrity of our ecosystems.
It’s not cancer. It’s cancer(S) and every specialized and stem cell (undifferentiated pluripotent cell) is at risk of mutating into something that doesn’t stop multiplying.
The cancer of a specialized gland cell is called adenocarcinoma.
The cancer of a skin cell is called squamous cell carcinoma.
The cancer of a melanocyte is melanoma and so on.
So anytime someone says, “they’re hiding the cure for cancer” they are being magnificently ignorant.
-Pathologist.
Cancer is a catch-all for a group of diseases with similar effects (abnormal cell growth that can spread to other parts of the body) but not causes. So there won't be a singular "cure for cancer" because they are not the same thing. At least that is how my lecturer explained it.
I had a lecturer at medical school say "half of medicine is made up, we just don't know which half".
OBGYN here: we still don’t know exactly what makes labor start. We know all about the mechanics and physiology, but we don’t know what makes the average uterus say it’s “go time.”.
Much like a bus, the baby pulls on the cord when it's ready to get out.
By linking humans, animals and the environment, the One Health program aims to address the full spectrum of disease control – from prevention to detection, preparedness, response and management – and contribute to global health security.
The approach can be applied at the community, subnational, national, regional, and global levels and relies on shared and effective governance, communication, collaboration and coordination. One Health makes it easier for people to better understand the co-benefits, risks, trade-offs, and opportunities to advance equitable and holistic solutions, so if there's a way to answer the questions we see on this list, it's this.
One I didn't see mentioned: we apparently don't know precisely *how* our bodies can distinguish gas from poop. We have some ideas, we know there are a ton of nerve endings in the area, but the precise mechanism of our bodies telling our brains "this is a fart, let loose" isn't really understood.
What blows my mind is, it's distinct enough that we even pass gas while asleep. That difference must be wired DEEP!
Not a doctor, but the amount of ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I got from doctors when I asked questions during my treatment for breast cancer was astounding. That's not to imply they were useless or didn't know what they were doing, I just asked a lot of questions lol.
Me: Why do I need to take Claritin before chemo?
Nurse: It helps with bone pain.
Me: Oh, that's interesting, why is that?
Nurse: Nobody knows!
Me: What's the cording I'm experiencing in my arm following my mastectomy?
Physical Therapist: Nobody actually knows what it's made of or where it comes from!
Me: Why am I suddenly unable to eat gluten following my cancer treatment?
Gastro Doc: Trauma, probably?
Having cancer really made it clear to me that so much of the human body is still a mystery!
That bone pain was no joke, it felt like my bones had spikes and were trying to come out Of my skin. Side note: the pain comes not from the chemo but from the shot they give you after to help keep your white blood cells up.
Allergies, spefically food allergies . And why do adults develop them after never reacting to them before?
What causes endometriosis and how do you treat it effectively. The leading theory is “retrograde menstruation,” which occurs in 80-90% of women. Ok….. so why do 80-90% of women not have endometriosis? There’s clearly something else going on that we don’t know.
Also, the only way to remove or get rid of endometriosis is through surgery. But there is a high rate of recurrence after surgery. Some women undergo multiple surgeries for it.
Had a pathologist tell me that the interesting part of his job wasn't finding out how someone died, it was seeing everything that can be wrong with someone, so many life threatening or life altering, horrible things that a person can have going on and still be alive.
Good friend died of pneumonia (he was too busy at work, couldn't afford to take time off), he kept using OTC meds for the symptoms.
He died unattended, so the coroner had to get involved, they did an autopsy. His body had cancer in three different places, he never stopped.
Dude was old-time tough.
Doctor here. Off the top of my head, here's a few deceptively big ones:
1) We still aren't exactly sure how anesthesia works. We just know it causes certain effects, and they are useful so we use it.
2) psychiatry is still shockingly infantile in our understanding of human disorders. It's constantly in a state of flux, we don't understand a lot about the meds we currently use, and the diagnostic criteria for disorders still changes as we realize "hey maybe all these behaviors aren't the same source disorder". It's incredibly hard to diagnose when the criteria is largely based on self report and subjective observations.
3) To a lesser degree than #2, neurology is still learning a lot. It's further because you can observe more objective findings in neuro than psych, but we still struggle a lot with how brains function.
4) Immunology. Don't even ask me, because no one knows really.
5) yawns. Still guessing on why that happens too. There's some theories, but that's the best we got.
Not MD but PhD, right now we are working on the connection between our intestinal microbiome and neuropsychiatric disease and brain aging. For instance, people with inflammatory bowel disease are more likely to develop dementia and experience co-morbid anxiety and depression, but we dont know why.
That sounds so random, I wonder how scientists came to investigate the connection and then reach this realisation.
The placenta is the only human organ grown for a specific purpose then discarded when it is no longer needed.
And brain is the human organ grown for a purpose but often discarded by voters.
Why our brain doesn't use its stem cells it has to heal itself.
I've recently read that brain cells barely go through regulary apoptosis unlike other cells - maybe it's coded into our DNA that these cells simply don't need replacement based on that?
"Unexplained Infertility"
...is the actual name, of an actual diagnosis, given to my wife and I, because according to every test, based on what modern medical science knows about fertility, we're fine. We *should* be able to conceive. "All the numbers are right." We probably even would be able to conceive, either of us, with different partners. But no one knows why the two of us can't, *together*. And it happens to far more couples than anyone talks about. But the only diagnosis we all get, is "unexplained infertility".
Interesting. Sounds like the 2 of them are not compatible, biologically speaking. I wonder how deep that goes. Like…. Are the fertilized eggs of them being discarded instantly or can his s***m not even enter the egg or maybe her… uterus is toxic to his s***m or something like that. This is fascinationg. My next thought would be why. Is it something like a defense mechanism? It can‘t be because their bodys know that they are too closely related or something like that or the Eiropean monarchs wouldn‘t have had health problems. Although maybe we developed this trick just recently? Oh so many questions
I’m a derm. We don’t know what exactly causes itching, like the molecular pathways for it. That’s why it can be so hard to find a good treatment when a patient comes in for itchy skin.
Not a doctor but I study cell and molecular biology. The immune system is wildly complex and right now feels as though we’re staring down into Mariana’s trench.
Rabies pathology
Alzheimer’s etiology
Encephalitis lethargica/chronic fatigue syndrome.
I have had several conditions since I was born. For the last 40 years, I have been seeing Doctors and have had many tests that were negative, but they have no clue. They just give me some meds to lessen some of the effects. 🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
The brain and especially how it governs our actions and personality.. Why do some people commit crimes like r**e and m*rder despite knowing the consequences while others would never do such things? Why do some people require multiple chances for ‘rehabilitation’ while others live their entire lives ‘right’? We don’t know the answers. It annoys me to no end when some people while chime in and claim “everyone can be rehabilitated” as if we actually know what that even means and how it works.
Disorders with the prefrontal cortex can lead to violence and commiting crime. It's the area of the brain, located roughly behind the right eye socket, responsible for basic morals like not killing another person. It combines emotions and logical thoughts into a descision for actions
I’m a nurse, not a doctor, but in school I learned that when in vitro fertilization was being pioneered, scientists were unable to create an embryo from the combination of s***m and egg. It wasn’t until they added female secretions in that they were able to produce viable embryos, and they don’t know what role those secretions play in the process.
This was about 15 years ago, so if anyone has new information on the topic I’d love to hear it!
I'm a sleep specialist. While we do have some good theories about some of the functions of REM as far as how it affects the brain and health, we still don't fully understand the purpose of dreaming. Like, why do we dream at all and why do dreams have a narrative instead of random incomprehensible imagery? Unfortunately this is unlikely to even be solved.
My theory: I believe dreams are a way of encoding memory, and as we function by telling stories, we built a narrative in our dreams by being partially conscious. Like our brain creates pictures and we tell a story based on them, so the brain adapts and forms pictures according to our narrative. Sometimes there are ruptures in our dreams (we change place, people around, even the goal we have in the drea) because brain takes the lead. The narrative, though, expresses feelings and disappointments. In other words, our brain would throw random pictures and our self interprets it with a narrative based on feelings/frustrations
We don't know the precise mechanism by which B12 deficiency causes nerve damage. We know that it happens, but not why.
(Many medical things are like that - easily observed and proven cause and effect, but complex and unclear mechanisms. Much of biology is still a black box to us. Neurological stuff in particular is full of this - lots of "we definitely know damage here causes effect XYZ, but not why.").
I'm an alcoholic and I take a B12 supplement every day that has 8333% of my daily value. It makes my pee bright green.
Apparently we know next to nothing about fibroids, which like 75% of women have at some point in their lives. That's great, considering that the largest one removed was 100 lbs- so not exactly a minor issue.
There are theories about different hormones and what things put you at higher risk, but aside from having surgery to have your existing ones removed, there is basically no information on what you can to do prevent them from coming back.
The biggest one I want solved
How we remember things, how does our memory work?
Some headway has been made at MIT but it hasn't been completely c*****d yet.
The “uncanny valley” fear. Why are humans unnerved and/or afraid of things that sound like, mimic, look like or act like humans but aren’t human?
Think of seeing human shaped shadows, dolls, robots, animals walking on 2 legs vs their usual 4, AI… it’s fascinating how we all have that feeling about some of the same things.
I have a very niche answer. We don’t know what is supposed to naturally bind to the area that benzodiazepines work at.
Benzodiazepines, BZD, are medications like Xanax and Valium. They produce anti-anxiety effects. And they have a very distinct chemical shape to fit into the BZD site in a group of five proteins. But we don’t know what is supposed to go there. Many medications are analogs of naturally binding molecules that we copy and then use to create an effect. The BZD site is for something, we just don’t know what.
That's not true, we know they mimick the neurotransmitter GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) and bind to GABA(A) receptors
Not a doctor but a speech pathologist - we still don’t fully understand what causes people to develop a stutter. We know there’s sometimes a genetic link and that some children do it as a developmental stage that they grow out of. It’s very difficult to treat.
Can you please stop this nonsense of censoring words! If you cannot deal with seeing a word like d***s, s*x, killed or whatever else, then what are you doing on the internet? The videos available are way worse, but suddenly people are offended by simple words??? It is insulting & irritating to censor/redact words!
Oh! Killed wasn't censored! I saw it uncensored in someone's reply the other day, too.
Load More Replies...Okay my fascination: Collaterals…some people when they develop heart disease will have a heat attack and die…others for unknown reasons will develop what we call collaterals…which are tiny little bypass vessels around areas of blockages…so basically some peoples bodies will reroute blocked blood vessels and we have NO idea why some people do and some people don’t!! :)
My MIL had this happen, shortly after she lost her husband she had a heart attack and they wanted to do a double bypass but she refused. I think she wanted to join her late hubby so she went home ready to die. Four years later she is in the hospital for something different and they find out that that is what she did! I had never heard of that before then, it seemed so crazy.
Load More Replies...Can you please stop this nonsense of censoring words! If you cannot deal with seeing a word like d***s, s*x, killed or whatever else, then what are you doing on the internet? The videos available are way worse, but suddenly people are offended by simple words??? It is insulting & irritating to censor/redact words!
Oh! Killed wasn't censored! I saw it uncensored in someone's reply the other day, too.
Load More Replies...Okay my fascination: Collaterals…some people when they develop heart disease will have a heat attack and die…others for unknown reasons will develop what we call collaterals…which are tiny little bypass vessels around areas of blockages…so basically some peoples bodies will reroute blocked blood vessels and we have NO idea why some people do and some people don’t!! :)
My MIL had this happen, shortly after she lost her husband she had a heart attack and they wanted to do a double bypass but she refused. I think she wanted to join her late hubby so she went home ready to die. Four years later she is in the hospital for something different and they find out that that is what she did! I had never heard of that before then, it seemed so crazy.
Load More Replies...