Alzheimers and general inactivity can render very similar effects as well.Unfortunate that the brain cannot regenerate its cells on its own though.
True, i was always taught that once brain cells were gone they were gone for good....However(keep in mind this assumption was based on instruction by my Bio 2 teacher) she said that some regeneration was possible ....to a degree, do you know of any sites that can confirm either/or?
Quote from: The_Seeker on August 22, 2006, 10:56:31 PMAlzheimers and general inactivity can render very similar effects as well.Unfortunate that the brain cannot regenerate its cells on its own though.Quote from: DanteMustDie on August 22, 2006, 11:01:51 PMTrue, i was always taught that once brain cells were gone they were gone for good....However(keep in mind this assumption was based on instruction by my Bio 2 teacher) she said that some regeneration was possible ....to a degree, do you know of any sites that can confirm either/or?Did anybody actually read the UF research I posted above??
It is possible, however after enough damage is done from a variety of sources (i.e. drugs, alcohol, massive physical damage) some regeneration may occur, but not enough undue the abuse. The human brain can only take so much. For example: Take a human speciman that frequently ingests the drug ecstasy(MDMA). The damage done to the brain from one pill ingested is equal to someone taking a needle and literally poking it once into your brain.....Regenerating that kinda damage it tough, if not impossible...its a case by case, it depends on what kind of damage has been done, and what the source of the damage was.