No, if you cut off the end of your finger, it will not grow back. Human fingers do not have the regenerative capability to regrow lost parts like some other animals do. However, the body can heal the wound, and the surrounding skin may close up, but the lost portion will not be replaced. For severe injuries, medical intervention may be necessary to restore function and appearance.
This is not a question, you have made a statement and put a question mark at the end.
the place of where it got cut, it would grow back again. Accept The end of the head I think... :)
A stem cell transplant can help cure disease because it can grow into any cells that you body needs. An example of a time when a stem cell transplant is when a man cut off the end of his finger and used pig stem cells to grow it back.
it gets cut off
Damage to the nail bed, usually. You may have hit or trapped the end of your finger a while back, and it's damaged the base of the nail. It should grow through with clear nail behind it.
No, they do not grow back thicker. There is a bit of a fallacy regarding this, but it has to do with the hair loosing the normal taper and being cut off square at the end, so it may appear thicker, but the thickness of the hair does not change.
first, nails are part of the bones in your finger. that thing you mentioned maybe is the nail growing back to your finger.
Put the ruler down on it. Then put your finger at one end of the ruler, and move the other end of the ruler to your finger. Do this again. The end of the ruler will be 90cm from where you started.
Ronnie Lott had the tip of his pinky finger amputated at the end of the 1985 season after it was crushed during a tackle.
Answer:Not usually, though on very rare occasions it has been reported to happen. My left index finger was cut off at the first joint when I was about 2 1/2 years old, by my estimate, in a door. It was found about an hour and a half later, and packed on ice while my parents rushed me to the hospital to have it sewn back on. It didn't take and withered up like a raisin. I was deeply saddened and tried to get my mother to tape it back on when I bumped it and it fell off at the dinner table. We prayed about it, and weeks later she noticed a growth that looked similar to a nail. It continued growing up to a point where it was functional and then stopped. It is slightly shorter than the other hand index finger because it lacks the padding at the tip. The nail also curls downward, and has scar tissue underneath, but I can do everything as if I had not lost the finger. I type, play guitar and everything else. I just wish it did not look any different. I also have to be careful not to cut open the scar tissue when I clip that fingernail.Answer:There are some studies that suggest that before the age of 9 years of age, a person can grow back a finger tip.Answer:No, This wouldn't be possible. You'd just have a stump...
capillaries run into your fingers some end there but some turn around and go back down
Probably 2 weeks,more if your hair grows slower!