Cells do not change in their size. But still our body grows bigger. Why?
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Answer:
it is of our maturity and development
Explanation:
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- Many organ cells change size and/or quantity as we age due to physiological changes.
- The cells of a woman's uterus decrease to one-third the size of those of a pre-menopausal woman after menopause.
- However, as men age, the prostate gland enlarges due to an increase in the number of cells as hormone levels fluctuate.
- Another gland, the thymus, which is important in the juvenile immune response, is large at birth but nearly vanishes by the age of 16, when the number of cells decreases.
- Cells might expand in size as a result of diseases or health problems that place an extra burden on our tissues and organs.
- A person with plaque in their blood arteries, for example, will grow bigger cardiac muscle cells, resulting in a larger heart.
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