Wednesday 21 October 2015

7-10 years for a New Me

Think of an experience from your childhood, something you remember clearly, a smell or a touch, something you saw. Now for the bombshell....you weren't there, not one single atom that's in your body was there during that event ....that really makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand up!!! We are but memories so create some good ones folks. Matter flows from one place to another and momentary comes together to be the person you are. The little red haired boy I was at primary school has been scattered to the wind and the atomic makeup has been scattered to the wind 2 or 3 times since then, only the DNA time stamp remains.
According to researchers, the body replaces itself with a largely new set of cells every seven years to 10 years, and some of our most important parts are revamped even more rapidly In the early '50s, researchers discovered the body's rejuvenating power by feeding and injecting subjects with radioactive atoms and observing their movement. They found that, on average, 98 percent of the atoms inside the body – the smallest units of matter, which form the molecules that help comprise bodily cells – are replaced each year. Most new atoms are taken in through the good Scottish air we breathe, the food we eat and the liquids we drink. More than five decades later, Swedish molecular biologist Dr. Jonas Frisen studied body tissue renewal by measuring levels of a radioactive material called carbon-14. This material was released in the air before testing nuclear weapons aboveground was banned in 1963. Carbon-14 is breathed in by plants, which humans and animals eat every day, and is part of our DNA. But unlike other atoms and molecules that are constantly changing, a person's DNA remains the same from the day of a cell's birth – which occurs when a parent cell divides – throughout its life span. When a cell divides, in other words, the DNA incorporated in the new cell includes a certain level of carbon-14 that corresponds to the level of the material in the air around us at the time. This serves as a time stamp of sorts, by which researchers can determine when the cell was created based on the level of carbon-14 in its DNA
What Frisen found is that the body's cells largely replace themselves every 7 to 10 years. In other words, old cells mostly die and are replaced by new ones during this time span. The cell renewal process happens more quickly in certain parts of the body, but head-to-toe rejuvenation can take up to a decade or so. If you think of what age you have “out grown” an allergy it (well at least in my case) always appears to be dividable by 7. That explains why our skin flakes off, our nails grow and our hair falls out. But if we are constantly being filled with brand-spanking-new cells, why is it that the body grows old? When it comes to aging, it appears that the secret lies not in our cells but, more specifically, in the cellular DNA

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