Bodyology: The Curious Science of the Human Body
Ever wondered what it's really like to be struck by lightning — what happens to your skin, nerves, heart rhythm, and brain in a split second? What it means to lose your sense of smell (anosmia), why it can vanish after illness or injury, and what recovery can look like? Whether we'll ever find a genuine cure for baldness and hair loss? Or how a single bee sting can save a woman's life?
Welcome to Bodyology: a page-turning collection of true stories and behind-the-scenes reporting on the curious science of our bodies. These essays were originally written for the Wellcome-backed Mosaic Science platform and turn complex anatomy, physiology, biology, neuroscience, immunology, hormones, and health research into irresistible storytelling.
Bodyology follows scientists, doctors, surgeons, engineers, and patients as they investigate the mysteries of the human body—our organs, limbs, blood, immune system, senses, skin, pain pathways, metabolism, and ageing. You'll meet the people whose lives changed in an instant, and the researchers racing to understand what went wrong, what healed, and what might be possible next.
In this one volume you'll explore:
Lightning strikes, electrical injury, trauma medicine, burns, CPR, survival, and the long tail of recovery
The chemistry of hair colour: permanent dyes, allergy, sensitisation, and the science (and safety debates) behind beauty
"Golden blood" and rare blood types: transfusion reactions, donor networks, and the high-stakes logistics of saving a life
Calories, metabolism and weight loss: food labels, cooking, satiety, obesity science, and why counting calories can fail in the real world
3D printing in medicine: prosthetics, rehabilitation, mobility devices, and whether additive manufacturing could help make body parts
How people survive catastrophic falls: balance, gait, vestibular system, and the overlooked hazards of everyday life
Miscarriage and pregnancy research, prenatal care, and the race to protect pregnancies
Ageing and the brain: cognition, mental resilience, and what science can—and can't—promise about outwitting ageing
Male pattern baldness and the search for a "cure," plus the science and economics behind new treatments
Allergies and noxious chemicals, immune defence, anaphylaxis, and why the body sometimes overreacts
Eye pain, nerves, and the doctor aiming to end severe eye pain—how sensation works and how it can misfire
Kangaroo care and "kangaroo babies": skin-to-skin contact, newborn health, and simple interventions that change outcomes
The male pill and contraception research: why pharma may be slow and what's next
Virtual reality in healthcare: remote surgery, surgical training, and the future of operating rooms
Menopause explained: hormones, symptoms, silence, stigma, and the science every adult should know
This is not a dry textbook. It's vivid science journalism — packed with body facts, medical case studies, surprising history, and cutting-edge research. It's designed to inform and entertain, not to replace medical advice.
Perfect for readers who love: human anatomy and physiology, biology books, medical mys |