jaw@ames.UUCP (James A. Woods) (05/21/85)
# "Most of all, I like to watch the gall bladder operations, since they're so colorful." -- Shirley Temple Black, commenting on one of her hobbies. Since 95% of all conversations descend to the anatomical, I'd like to quickly, and cathartically, advertise a few of my favorite medical journals, working as I do upstairs from a life sciences library. These include Pain Sleep Bone Brain "Pain", with its artery-red title embossed upon a vein-blue cover is of especial amusement -- for this month, aside from the enlightening editorial on "Itch", we have the magnificent article by Beverly Whipple and Barry Komisaruk (vol. 21, p. 357-367): "Elevation of Pain Threshold by Vaginal Stimulation in Women" The abstract is rather boring, and the text itself is deliberately stark in its dispassion. Anything beginning with "Previous studies in this laboratory have shown that vaginal stimulation (VS) in rats blocks behavioral responses to noxious stimulation (e.g. leg withdrawal to foot pinch [15], vocalization to tail shock [16], and tail flick away from radiant heat [24]), VS was far more effective than a standard analgesic dose of morphine sulfate..." has got to be a gut-wrencher, or to some [you, helpless and dear readers] a vicarious thrill. Within this particular contribution to science, the monotonic bar graph plotting the labels "Pre-VS Control" "Post-VS Control" "TV" "Fur Mitt" (!) "VS at 1 min" "VS at 5 min" "VS-Pleas. at 1 min" ... "VS-Pleas. to Orgasm" makes one wonder if the experimental subjects were paid well for their efforts. For the nonspecialist, the British weekly New Scientist closely monitors the more eccentric contributions to the medical art. Just to prove that the male species is equally poked and prodded, they report in the March 28 issue that penile injury brought about by vacuum cleaners is in the news again, having captured an unusual amount of public interest about four years ago. What red-blooded male could forget the "Hoover Dustette" reportage in New England J. Med. some time ago? The entertaining New Scientist relays the tidbit that a new scientific unit has been created. It's called the PENRIG (100 grams tissue moving a sensor 1 millimetre). c.f. the related article by J. M. Barry "Nocturnal penile tumescence monitoring with stamps", Urology, 15:171, 1980. No stiffs these blokes! Well, back to the breathtakingly detailed lithographic plates we have here of frozen cadaver cross-sections. Oh, I must note that my reading tastes at home are much less lurid -- I really prefer the bedside company of children's stories by Edward Gorey and Roald Dahl. -- James A. Woods (ames!jaw)