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DS POSTED BY: DANISH

Posted By: Danish Subhan Sheikh, Karachi, Pakistan.


What are fascinating insights into the unknown universe in our body?

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(The alveoli with their capillaries. This is where oxygen is exchanged for CO2. Or vice versa, depending on
your point of view).

Here again are some fascinating insights into the unknown universe in our body.

This is the so-called "cauda equina" , which means as much as Horse Tail.

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Our spinal cord , which contains our nervous system and allows it to communicate down and up, does
not go all the way down the spine. And the nerves that are responsible for the lower part of our body
therefore all run together, in one strand, from the 1st or second lumbar vertebra.

And above you see this nerve cord, but horizontally . It supplies the legs, the genitals and the anal area.

By the way, our nerves are so electric that they could power a light bulb.

And that's why it's not at all esoteric when people talk about "energy" in our bodies.

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These are the lungs of a fetus in the mother's belly.

They are not ready to function until the end of the eighth month of pregnancy.

That's why it's so critical if a baby is born before then, when the lungs are still "immature."

In the mother's womb, the baby does not need its lungs. It is supplied with oxygen-rich blood through
the umbilical cord.

When it comes into the world, its lungs unfold. If the umbilical cord is cut too early, the lungs have to
develop very quickly, otherwise the baby will suffocate.

And if you leave the umbilical cord intact for a while, the baby will carefully start breathing on its own
and after a while the umbilical cord will stop pulsating.

A mature lung can take in 5 to 6 liters of air a minute.

And about once a minute, all our blood is pumped through the lungs, where CO2 is extracted from it
and where it is then re-oxygenated.

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That is the stem cells.

One could say that they are "immature", but that does not do them justice.

Because unlike specialized cells with fixed tasks, stem cells have unlimited potential.

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They can become any type of cell in our body.

And I am sure that we still know very, very little about them.

And here we are again very close to the nerves, because here we take a look at the spinal cord.

On the one hand, the spinal column makes us strong and upright, but it also contains what is most
sensitive in our body and therefore needs to be well protected.

The spinal cord runs inside the spine, inside the spinal cord.

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And the little threads that you see are some of the 31 pairs of nerves that come out at the level of the
vertebrae and supply the whole body with information

By the way, touching the feet also “touches” the genitals in a certain way because in our brain they are
very close.

That's why foot fetishists sometimes get things mixed up.

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This one is always so surprising.

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In places where our skin is very thick, like our hands and feet, it is extremely sensitive.

Like here, on our fingertips.

Right here, but also on our lips and genitals, our skin is full of so-called Meissner's corpuscles. They
make sure that we are very "sensitive" in these places.

Our skin has extremely different thicknesses in different parts of our body.

On the soles of our feet it can be half a centimeter, but on our eyelids it can be half a millimeter.

Our skin is an organ!

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And here the engineers of the world have copied something, because it is a "bearing".

One of our wonderful joints, the shoulder joint.

Here the humerus, the head of the upper arm bone, moves in its "socket", the glenoid cavity.

That's where it's important for the joint to be well "lubricated" and protected. That's why the head has
that wonderful yellow cartilage that protects it from wear and tear.

Wear and tear is more likely to come from misalignments.

Kind of like the crooked wheel of a rolling suitcase.

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Sometimes you can see the sky in another person's eyes.

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The pupil dilates and contracts, regulating how much light is allowed to enter.

The inventors of the camera aperture simply copied this.

Sometimes it is a feeling - at least for me - to really fall into the eyes of another person.

There's some truth to that, in a way, because we're looking through "into" the other person. Because
the pupil is actually a hole, an opening.

Women used to take belladonna to look more attractive. Belladonna dilates the pupils.

Because unconsciously we know that a dilated pupil means we like something we see.

Or even that we are aroused.

And that's why a man likes to look at a woman with dilated pupils.

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A useful glutton.

You see here a macrophage - a glutton cell - at "lunch.

You see it here in white. It likes to eat viruses, bacteria and foreign bodies. It encases them and then
breaks them down.

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And, what not everyone knows is that macrophages eliminate masses of degenerate cells every day,
cells that have changed in such a way that they can develop into cancer or are already cancer cells.

Cancer cells are our own cells that simply change in such a way that they no longer fulfill their tasks in
our bodies, but start doing completely different things.

A healthy immune system keeps such cells in check.

This always makes me wonder about the "logic" of certain cancer therapies.

Celebration to the macrophages!

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Here you see the smallpox virus - it is blue here - attacking a cell.

Viruses are really strange "creatures".

What hardly anyone knows is how little we know about viruses.

What is this "creature" that is really just a protein, but has the "intelligence" to hijack our cells and
reprogram them for its own purposes? And that mutates at lightning speed to avoid being "snatched"
by us?

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How can this be? Do all viruses perhaps have some kind of "intelligence" in common?

By the way, the smallpox virus is thought to have been eradicated. The last smallpox patient was in
1977.

Personally, I don't believe that viruses are "eradicable." I rather believe that some viruses remain latent
somewhere until the time comes for them again.

Smallpox vaccination is not mandatory now and our little "friend" just doesn't show up right now.

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This is the HIV virus. That's just the way it is. One comes, the other goes.

Why do some people never get AIDS?

The "boss" of all glands, the pituitary gland.

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It "hangs" at the bottom of our brain.

And it is called the boss because it is like a kind of "control center" for the other glands.

The other glands produce hormones, but the pituitary gland gives the "order".

Without it, no growth, no menstruation and no sperm production, no breast milk.

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And here you can hardly guess what it is. It's a bone, take a close look.

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What looks strong and stable to ours looks like a delicate, sponge-like structure under the microscope.

But the intelligence that created us arranged the structures so that they can support enormous weight.

If we take just one step, our thigh bone receives a pressure of 844 kg per cm to the power of 2 (I don't
know how else to write that).

No wonder engineers today are looking closely at the structures and trying to recreate them to use for
our purposes.

Bones are basically lightweight structures.

After all, they only make up 6% of our body weight.

It's our muscles that are heavier. They make up 40%.

40% of our body weight is muscle. And only 6% is made up of bones.

Posted By: Danish Subhan Sheikh, Karachi, Pakistan.

Email: danishwanted618@gmail.com

Cell No: 00923197930064

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