The skin has a lot of dead cells,most of the dust you see in your room is dead skin. Your hair is also made up of some dead skin.
your skin is technically and organ (called epidermis) and it is made of cells. sometimes the cells die, like and organ and shed then replace themselves. im sure about this, but i think your hair is the only dead part of your body.
Examples of dead cells include hair and nails, as they are composed of the protein keratin and do not contain any living cells. Additionally, the stratum corneum layer of the skin is made up of dead skin cells that have moved to the surface as part of the body's natural shedding process.
Cells .
When These cells Die, They Become Part Of The Surface Layer Of The Epidermis.
When These cells Die, They Become Part Of The Surface Layer Of The Epidermis.
No. Hair is dead. Hair follicles are the only alive part of the hair. They're what grow and contribute their dead cells to hair growth.
Epidermis
cells
Your body is made up of trillions of cells, so all of the parts of your body have cells. there is no part present in the body with out a cell. hence cell is called as structural unit of body. We all start as two cells. We grow into 4, 8, 16, and so on. Cells begin to differentiate soon in the development of life, but everything is a compilation of cells.
All parts of the body, as I know it are made of cells......... I could be wrong though.......
Basically cells do not control rather they are part of the tissues and the tissues are part of the organ. The Cells are what makes the body part or the whole body what it is. They generate energy and they make up the whole body. The control center of the body is the brain which is made up of tissues and therefore made up of cells too.
Your blood is made of white blood cells, red blood cells, platelets, and plasma. The white blood cells fight infections and are part of the body's immune system. Red blood cells carry oxygen. Platelets are bits of broken down dead cells and work with a protein called fibrin, which heals wounds and cuts that the body sustains. Plasma holds the blood cells in suspension and keeps electrolytes balanced.