brain cells die all the time, it is almost impossible to tell if they die when you stop thinking.
Out of all of those statements, the only true statement is that all cells come from other cells. Cells do not stop producing themselves once one reaches adulthood and organs do not make cells in the body. Also, cells do not depend on the brain to create more cells.
All nerves in the body are connected by synapses to the ganglia in the spinal cord to where the travel back up to the brain
i really do not know brain
Nerves, nerve cells and dendrites. The spinal cord connects directly to the brain, using electric signals to control different parts of the body as they travel down the spinal cord and throughout the body.
A backbone, obviously which is a central nerve cord for the body. all advanced forms of life have this. And the backbone is connected directly to the brain
Brain is the operator of our body. all our body parts have nerves.all the nerves are connected to the spinal cord in the back. from the spinalcord it reaches the Brain.
They are not at all connected.
No, mamy cells are, such as skin cells but in some sorts of tissue there are both more loosely connected cells and freely circulating cells, such as red blood cells.
all cells are living init
It's connected to many things. It's connected to the circulatory system because it has arteries/veins all pumping blood into the brain. It's also connected to the nervous system (well it is the nervous system), the spinal cord. Also connected to your eyes.
The brain effects all nerve cells
No. The nucleus is often compared to the brain, but it is not really a brain made of brain tissue.
Like all other cells, but in the case of the brain the interconnections are more important than just the presents of cells (its not what the cells do, but the data they transmit), thus almost all brain cell growth occurres in the first 3 to 5 years of life.
Brain cells remain in the brain. They are the building blocks of the brain. If the brain cells were in the stomach, you'd have a brain in your stomach! Same goes for the stomach and all parts of the body. In my yoga class my instructor mentioned that there are more brain cells in the stomach than in the brain, I wanted to find out if it was true and I came across this article. So maybe you can have cells "in the wrong places"...... (look below under related links)
There is about 160,000,000,000 cells in human brain. Half of the number are neurons, which are rensponsible for all the "thinking" functions. The other half are "glial cells", which help neurons with their activity.
brain cells die all the time, it is almost impossible to tell if they die when you stop thinking.