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.
Yes
Most red blood cells die in the spleen, where they are filtered out and broken down by the body.
Cells are dying every second of our lives. and they are being replaced at the same rate unless you have some disease.
Then you are guaranteed to die as white blood cells make up your immune system. The tiniest bacterium/virus/fungus/mutated cell would thrive immediately and you would die just as fast.
Yes, but they need the specific environment. They can divide remember? They will die pretty fast though.
lithium batteries do die fast.
It is a nerve agent. Or chemical asphyxiant.An example is Hydrogine Cyanide.Cyanide is a fast-acting, potentially deadly chemical that prevents the cells of the body from using oxygen properly. When this happens, the cells die.
This depends on the context of the question. Our cells do die, and we do die, but the two are not necessarily connected. Many of our cells are still alive after we die, and die after we die. If all of your cells die, then you cannot be alive. If all of your cells died at once, then you would die at that instant.
all cells die. when human skin cells die, for example, they are shed and we call it dust.
Generally no, in fact most are quite sedentary or move only as their environment moves. But some are built for speed - such as sperm cells [several inches per hour].
Yes, cells can do that. For example, if skin cells die, they are replaced by new ones.
60,000,000 cells die each second. 3,600,000,000 cells die die each hour.