Yes they do, but every sec. some new cells are made.
Red blood cells die in the spleen and liver, where they are broken down and recycled by the body.
your body's cells run out
Most red blood cells die in the spleen, where they are filtered out and broken down by the body.
Yes. Cells die all the time. If they didn't, multicellular organisms would not be able to function.
Stem cells can live on after you die if your body is not cremated. Researchers say stem cells can remain alive for at least 17 days after death.
When they die, your body absorbs it.
There are too many cells to count. Essentially ever part of the body, from skin to the heart to hair, is made of cells. Therefore, there are billions of cells in a child's body.
When a female is born her body contains all the ovarian follicles she will ever make. A fraction of these immature follicles eventually turn into all the egg cells she will ever release. The other follicles either produce hormones or just die.
Necrosis or gangrene.
You die
Cells die fast because they are a tiny function in the fetus's in which if they were able to live a substantual amount of time like us, they would explode in your body. about 3456407564, 000, 000 cells die in your body every second. so becareful because if you had no cells you wouldn't exist.
When you die, the cells in your body start to break down and degrade. This process can damage and fragment the DNA in those cells, leading to its eventual disintegration. DNA does not have a lifespan on its own, but rather its degradation is a result of the breakdown of the cells that contain it after death.