Most likely because it is dufficult to comprehend that as you are reading and learning about it, it is happening right now, even as you read this sentence.
yes, it attack the central nervous system and it also causes red bumps that will quickly turn to blisters.
The brain is a funny shape that is unexplainable to describe. Its kind of like a squiggy circle with bumps. Erm, if anyone has a better answer, be sure to edit.
The human brain is about 6 inches long, dark pink when healthy, and has the shape of a lopsided oval. It is covered in bumps.
If you are breathing rapidly, you have goosebumps, you're feeling nauseated and unwell, this could be a problem with your adrenal glands. You may also have simple anxiety which is causing all of these problems.
Bumps and depressions in the skull are more closely related to the thickness and contour of the skull bones themselves rather than the development of underlying brain areas. They can be influenced by genetics and environmental factors, but do not necessarily correlate with the development of specific brain regions.
Bumps are caused by swelling beneath the skin. However, not all head injuries go only "out." It is possible to bruise and damage the brain, causing internal swelling. That is called acute brain trauma. It is what killed Natasha Richardson.
The autonomic nervous system activates tiny muscles in the skin which causes the hairs to stand on end instead of lying flat on the skin as they usually do. In other mammals this fluffs out the fur, increasing its ability to insulate against the cold (helping to keep warm) and making the animal look bigger (sometimes scaring away the other animal causing the original fear). But in humans all it does is cause bumps in the skin around the bases of the hairs, these bumps are commonly called "goose bumps".
it is grey and squishy like a blob of jelly and it has little legs to run around your head. the reason why we get headaches is because it bumps into the sides. the brain sings to tell us what to do.
Habit FormationAs with any form of repetition, "practice makes permanent." The nervous system follows this same rule; the more often a certain neuron pathway is used, the easier and faster impulses will be conducted along that path. This ease of passage is achieved at the cellular level. The brain/control center of the nervous system sends its signals through nerves made up of nerve cells. At its most basic level, a nerve cell is made up of a central processing unit, a long sending fiber (axon), and many small receiving tendrils (dendrites). Frequently used axons form boutons, the French word for "bumps." The more boutons, the faster the message is sent.However, once these boutons are formed, they can't be un-formed. This is why habits are so hard to break. The best way to break a habit, then, is to form a stronger nervous connection through more repetitions than with the bad habit.
it is supposedly lukes father as it is revealed in the platinum version he's a frontier brain. You Welcome
You get it those super small temporary little bumps on your arms and legs from shivering/being cold, or lightly tickling your arm. Some may even get it from being nervous.
The surface of the brain has wrinkles. The sulci are the inner folds of the surface of the cerebrum, and the gyri are the "bumps" of the surface. These increase the surface area of the cerebrum.