Expert instinct : do animals have medical secrets?.

Date:
2000
  • Audio

About this work

Description

Some animals have a remarkable ability to heal themselves. Could these methods work for humans? The VIETNAMESE POT BELLIED PIG develops skin cancers, some 4cm across. These could be fatal in a human. However, frequently these tumours suddenly disappear. How does it happen? These pigs have some special immune system. FROGS, too, can heal themselves from serious abdominal wounds, even when in a squalid tank. Michael Zazlov, was astonished by his frogs, whose wounds did not fester, and has discovered they have chemicals at the wound site - an antibiotic he has called 'meganin'. He is trying to exploit this commercially. Do animals have special knowledge about medicinally useful plants. Manuel Arguillan investigated chimps eating the Aspinia plant with its hairy leaves rolled up. He found antibiotics which may affect nematodes. Richard Rangam disagrees and thinks the hairy leaf traps nematodes in the gut, so it is a physical effect, not chemical. George Lazano is totally sceptical as there are no controlled experiments. Andrew Wighton studies gorillas eating the Venonia plant. It is possible that generations of a successful species have selected some plants prophylactically.

Publication/Creation

London : BBC Radio 4, 2000.

Physical description

1 sound cassette (30 min.)

Copyright note

BBC Radio

Notes

Broadcast on 24th April 2000

Creator/production credits

Produced by Paul Arnold
Presented by Jolyon Jenkins. Other participants are Prof. David Lloyd and Rosario Chirandola (Royal Veterinary College); Michael Zazlov; Manuel Arguillan (Cornell); Richard Rangan (Harvard); George Lazano (Simon Fraser Uni, British Columbia); Andrew Wighton (St Andrew's Uni)

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
    472A

Permanent link