yes
You shouldn't ... the nicotine gets into the bloodstream and may effect the test results. Fasting is just that ... fasting on everything whether it is consumed or smoked.
With exercise your resting heart rate should be reduced as your heart is more effecient at pumping blood and does not need to work as hard.
to be closer to the brain which gets 1st dibs at oxygenated blood after the heart itself
Cardiomyopathy
any infection that gets in the blood stream can also get in the heart causing infection.
Mushy bone marrow is caused by Osteomyelitis, which is an inflammation of the bone marrow and surrounding bone. The bone marrow swells and presses against the bone's blood vessels when a bone gets infected, causing parts of the bone to die and the infection to spread to surrounding muscles and other soft tissues.
After breaking his leg (the focal point of the novel), Phineas falls down the stairs of a building and breaks it again (at the climax). He goes into surgery to have it repaired, and some of his bone marrow gets into his bloodstream, going to his heart and stopping it, as explained by Dr. Stanpole.
Bone marrow edema is a condition when fluid gets in and stays inside of the bones in a human body. This condition can be detected using an MRI.
T-lymphocytes are produced in the bone marrow from hematopoietic stem cells. They mature in the thymus, hence their name "T cells."
no it will not affect the child because the child does not depend on the bone so ask a doctor
because the amount of fluid that get out from capillaries are low,,,,as we know the lymphatic vessels drain the excess amount of fluid that gets out from capillaries,,,so in bone marrow there is no high amount of fluid so there is no need to have lymphatic drainage :))
Bone marrow is a tissue found inside the bones. In adult humans, marrow in some bones such as the pelvis, sternum and femur produces new blood cells.There are two types of bone marrow: red and yellow. Red bone marrow is mainly consisted of myeloid tissue, while the yellow marrow is consisted of fat cells. Of course, when someone is born, all marrow is red. Eventually, some of it gets converted into yellow marrow. Red and most of the white blood cells are produced in red marrow, while a part of the while blood cells is produced in yellow marrow. In the case of need, yellow marrow can be converted into red marrow in order to produce new blood cells.
Yellow bone marrow stores fat, which the body consumes as a last resort in cases of extreme starvation. It also turns into red marrow in emergencies such as blood loss or anemia. Miraculously, this process can happen in just a few hours. Red bone marrow produces all blood cells, except lymphocytes which are produced in the marrow and reach maturity in the generative lymphatic tissues, such as the thymus gland or bone marrow.
As children, nearly all of our bones contain red bone marrow, but this gradually gets replaced by yellow marrow as we grow older. As adults, red bone marrow is found mainly in the axial skeleton (skull, spine and rib cage) and girdles (pelvis and shoulders) and at the ends (epiphyses) of the humerus and femur.
myelogenous affects the bone marrow. while lymphocytic affects the lymph tissue. so there is two different patterns so be careful with terms being used. so bone marrow gets affected in myelogenous means Chronic myelogenous ( myelocytic) leukemia , in short abbreviation it is called ( CML).
The hematopoietic system, which includes the bone marrow, is responsible for producing blood cells in the body. This process is known as hematopoiesis, where stem cells in the bone marrow differentiate and develop into various types of blood cells, including red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
It starts in the bone marrow. It i s immature white blood cells that never mature into regular functioning white blood cells. The immature cells keep dividing at a rapid rate and as soon as the bone marrow gets too crowded they spill out into the blood stream.