No. Brain cells don't repair themselves- once their gone, their gone.
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Brain cells.
it kills your brain cells
Osmosis is the movement of water from a High Water (Dilute Solution) to a Low Water (Strong Solution). If blood plasma becomes very dilute with water, when it travels to the brain the brain cells will swell because the are taking on too much water. This happens because the high concentration of water (in the blood) is moving to the lower concentration of water (brain cells) making the cells swell as they are taking on too much water.
Drinking excess amounts of water can kill you, sometimes water goes to the brain and causes brain damage and sometimes death.
Your brain is made up of 60% water, not drinking enough water has detrimental effects on our brains. When your body lacks water, brain cells and other neurons shrink and biochemical processes involved in cellular communication slow. A drop of as little as 1 to 2% of fluid levels can result in slower processing speeds, impaired short-term memory, tweaked visual tracking and deficits in attention. With proper hydration however, neurons work best and are capable of reacting faster.
Its certain brain cells in the primal part of your brain. It controls the bsic necessities such as eating and drinking water.
Yes water can make your brain cells grow, but too much water will make your brain cells burst.
Brain cells.
water
Well actually, dehydration causes your brain cells to shrink which evidently makes you less focused and even slightly dumber. By drinking water, you rehydrate those shrunken brain cells thus making your brain work harder and theoretically make you smarter.
by sleeping or drinking water it helps
Plenty of exercise, and drinking plenty of water - say, 100 ounces per day.
Drinking water is very simply processed once inside of the human body. Drinking water is absorbed into the cells of the body.
No.
it kills your brain cells
No I am afraid not.
Excess water drinking will "pull" sodium from your cells, in an attempt to minimize or avoid hyponatremia. However, too much water drinking can "wash out" sodium from the bloodstream, and precipitate dangerous problems, such as seizures, coma, and even death.