Biology, asked by aneezashehzad3, 1 month ago

Do the number of cells in your body remain the same as you grow?
Do the cells in your body grow bigger as you grow?

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Answers

Answered by jpsinghaarush
0

Answer:

According to one expert who spends his days looking closely at cells, the answer is generally no, but sometimes yes. ... In general, we grow to our full adult size via an increase in the number — not the size — of our cells. But some of our cells can change size — and this can be for healthy or not-so-healthy reasons.

The dozens of cell types that make up our body range in size and shape from small doughnut-shaped red blood cells that are just 8 micrometres across, to long skinny nerve cells that can grow to over one metre. In general, we grow to our full adult size via an increase in the number — not the size — of our cells.

Explanation:

Answered by Cutegirl09
1

Answer:

Body tissues grow by increasing the number of cells that make them up. Cells in many tissues in the body divide and grow very quickly until we become adults. ... But some cells, such as skin cells or blood cells are dividing all the time. When cells become damaged or die the body makes new cells to replace them.

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