Category Biology

Why don’t we feel pain when cutting hair/nails?

            Pain is felt only when a nerve end is stimulated by a cut or injury.

Since hair and nails do not have nerve endings, cutting them does not produce pain. However, cells at the base of a nail and hair are living cells and have nerve endings.

So, if a nail is cut from the base or if a hair is plucked off, pain is felt.

Why are transplanted organs rejected?

 Transplanted organs are rejected because of the presence of special protein molecules present in the body of every individual. Called antibodies, these molecules can easily recognize a foreign body by a substance called antigens produced by the later.

  As the organ to be transplanted is obtained from another individual, it may contain several antigens not found in the patient. So, when transplanted, the patients’ body makes antibodies to fight the foreign antigens present in the transplanted organ. In this process, the donor organ is destroyed or simply rejected. Chances of rejection can be reduced by tissue matching as in case of blood transfusion or by using an organ from a sibling or from a close relative of the patient. Also, drugs given after the transplantation help in suppressing the body’s protective response and thus prevent rejection.

Why do baby teeth fall out?

Baby teeth or milk teeth fall out to accommodate the full complement 32 teeth in the growing
jaw bone. The bigger, permanent teeth develop to fill the available space.

            There are 20 milk teeth which start appearing from six to eight months after birth and are all out by the time a child is about two and half years old. As the child grows up, the jaw bone grows in size accommodating the larger and more numerous permanent teeth. The permanent teeth actually begin to develop inside the gums as soon as the milk teeth appear. As a permanent tooth grows, it cuts away the root of the milk tooth. Thus, a milk tooth falls. The falling of milk teeth begins with the growth of the first permanent molar at the age of about six.

 

Why doesn’t the stomach digest itself?

            The stomach is a muscular bag-like organ that digests food with strong acids contained in gastric juices produced by glands in the stomach lining. To protect itself from being digested along with the food, the stomach lining is coated with a thick layer of mucous produced by mucous cells. This mildly alkaline mucous secretion protects the stomach against the acidic digestive juices.

            If the stomach lining is damaged, the stomach sheds off the cells which are quickly replaced with new ones. In severe cases where the protective mucous secretions are inadequate, the stomach lining gets damaged resulting in a painful stomach ulcer.