The tissue of the sacs of the lungs has potential of regenerative growth of up to 80% of damaged tissue. Grape seed extract adds up to 80% of regenerative growth capability of damaged lung sac tissue.
It is speculated, but not proven, that humans have the potential to regenerate their lung alveoli until they can't anymore, due to smoking, cancer, or other extensive chronic damage
It is speculated that they can, but it has never been proven.
Hey thats a bilaw
yes they can fully repair.
A damaged brain tissue can't be resorted.
No, lung tissue will heal. It may take a while, but as long as the tissue has not become necrotic (you would die), and you do not have cancer the tissue should repair itself. This will take a very long time, but it is possible.
It is the tissue which surrounds and supports the actually functional lung tissue
In lungs there are several types of tissues, depending of what part of the lung you're referring to. It gets thinner and thinner from bronchi to alveoli, for example with just one layer of cells in these last ones.
Pathological lung sections differ from normal lung tissue. Pathological lung sections include the pathological tissues of fibronectin, collagens, and proteoglycans.
No once it dies like in a heart attack it cannot repair itself. This is why people die when they have a heart attack, so much of they're heart has dies that it can no longer pump blood.
The Penis, however, female saliva rejuvenates it pretty well on all of my experiments ;)
In obstructive lung disease airways are narrowed which results in resistance to air flow during breathing. In restrictive lung disease, expansion of the lung is limited by disease that affects the chest wall, pleura, or lung tissue itself.
In obstructive lung disease airways are narrowed which results in resistance to air flow during breathing. In restrictive lung disease, expansion of the lung is limited by disease that affects the chest wall, pleura, or lung tissue itself.
The stroma
The lungs tissue will float
Depending onto injury level, but recovery is always possible.