Remember that there are nerve cells in the brain as well as the rest of the body. If they don't work, death will be the end result.
You will get a heart attack
i dont know ...thats why im asking
nerve cells and sex cells
they go to your brain and the brain takes it from thar
They go through synapses.
They Are A Special Group Of Nerve Cells. Nerve Signals From The Brain Control The Pacemaker, Making It Go Faster Or Slower When Required. Specialist cells in the heart which have autorhythmicity.
Nerve cells, also known as neurons, typically do not go through the cell cycle to divide and reproduce. They are terminally differentiated cells that do not undergo cell division once they have matured. This is why nerve cell damage or loss is often irreversible.
Yes.
When nerve cells are fully developed and differentiated, they usually do not undergo cell division. This lack of cell division is known as differentiation arrest, causing nerve cells to exit the cell cycle and remain in a non-dividing state. This is why nerve cells have limited regenerative capacity in response to injury or disease.
Yes, there is a difference in the length of nerve cells in a rat and a giraffe. Giraffes have much longer nerve cells due to their significantly larger body size compared to rats. The length of nerve cells is proportional to the size of the organism and the distance signals need to travel.
Yes.
Then the system you are working with will have the wrong process causing things to go wrong