At birth, a newborn baby’s body consists of approximately 75% water, which is a slightly higher water content than bananas but marginally less than that of potatoes. As humans age, the percentage of water in their bodies decreases. By adulthood, the average human body is about 60% water. Maintaining proper hydration is essential for numerous […]
Hysterical strength
Hysterical strength is a phenomenon where individuals exhibit remarkable physical strength in exceptional circumstances, surpassing their normal capabilities. For instance, a woman who rescued several children by fending off a polar bear and another who lifted a car to a height sufficient to rescue a person are both examples of this remarkable display of strength. […]
38 Fascinating Facts About the Human Body Most People Don’t Know
The human body is totally amazing!
I’m constantly in awe when I read about it and learn how complex we really are. It’s kind of a miracle, don’t you think?
I sure do!
What are facts about the human body that a lot of people don’t know about?
AskReddit users shared their thoughts.
38. Triple threat!
“The chance of a natural pregnancy with identical triplets is 1 in 200,000,000.
My friend had identical triplets.
It was her first time making whoopie and she got pregnant with triplets. I didn’t know it was so rare.”
37. Stripes.
“Humans have stripes, we just normally can’t see them. They’re called Blaschko’s lines and form along the paths of embryonic cell migration.
The stripes are sort of U-shaped down our front, V-shaped on our back, wavy on the head and face and we have basic, simple stripes on our extremities.”
36. Smart stomachs!
“Your stomach is surrounded by more brain cells (half a billion neurons) than the brain of a cat contains in total.
It’s your enteric nervous system. It controls digestion, operates autonomously, has its own memory, can handle its own reflexes, it has its own senses even.
It’s thought to have come about because of the blood-brain barrier and the main brain being locked away in the skull, a spinal column and nerves away from the critical action of nutrition.”
35. I did not know that!
“The eyeball is the fastest healing part on your body.
Let me put it in a ‘simpler’ version if you don’t believe me. The eye ball has a cornea.
Now, cutting the cornea will result in much pain, but since this part doesn’t contain blood, but only gets a supply of oxygen, it is the only fastest healing part of your body that can heal in only 24-36 hrs.
Believe me now?”
34. Ahhhhhhh!
“X-rays of children’s mouths are nightmare fuel.
The second set of teeth to replace baby teeth are already grown and lodged in their skulls. So you’ll see two rows of teeth and its freaky looking.
They don’t grow in when the old ones fall out, they are already loaded in the chamber waiting to get launched.”
33. What?!?!
“Chickens in the eggs develop a tail and teeth, but those stops growing after some time. Its probably what’s left from the first birds, which had a long tail and teeth.
Scientists think that, with the right timing, you could make it so they dont stop growing and have a “chickenosaur” out of the egg, with small teeth in the beak and a long tail.”
32. Nuts!
“Humans are bioluminescent and glow in the dark, but the light that we emit is 1,000 times weaker than our human eyes are able to pick up.”
31. Did you hear that?
“Some women can feel the exact moment an egg is released from the ovary during ovulation.
Feels like a little pop just on one side.
Pretty neat.”
30. For a reason.
“The reason it’s so easy to break your collar bone is because its designed to break.
The way it was explained to me is that its like a circuit breaker.
It breaks there to stop the shock of impact getting to your spine.”
29. Oh, boy!
“Pineapple contains bromelaine, an enzyme that ingests proteins.
Your meat parts are mostly made of proteins, so when you’re eating pineapple, it’s also eating you.”
28. All you need.
“You don’t need those detox tea or whatever detox products your high school friend and your aunt are selling.
Your liver is all you need.”
27. Wow.
“Alzheimer’s disease isn’t just gradual loss of memory. It physically exists in the brain. It’s a physical plaque substance that attacks the brain.
Like, if you were able to open the skull of a person suffering from Alzheimer’s disease to take a look at their brain, you would actually see this sticky, fibrous, grey physical matter overtaking their brain.”
26. Keep that in mind.
“Every 7 years, every cell in your body will have completely replaced itself. Different cells divide at different rates, however.
You need a new stomach lining weekly and a new skeleton every 7 years.”
25. It’s down there.
“You have a big flab of tissue that hangs down from under your stomach which covers your intestines. It’s called the greater omentum, it’s almost always removed in any basic anatomy drawing so most people don’t know it’s existence! It stores quite a bit of fat but it carries out some unusual roles.
In an abdomen infection it sometimes can wrap itself around it, hence giving it the nickname the “policeman of the abdomen.””
24. Painful.
“95% of the sensory fibres in the human ear are used to transmit sound. Until recently, the function of the other 5% of fibres were not known.
We now know that under certain conditions, these remaining fibres can become sensitized, leading to a rare condition known as hyperacusis, where everyday sounds cause the sufferer immense pain.
It is debilitating and often leads to people giving up their careers, relationships and homes, isolating themselves indefinitely in sound-insulated rooms.
Source: I am one of these people.”
23. Interesting…
“When loosing weight, fat isn’t lost through heat, p**p or sweating. Nearly all fat is lost through simple breathing.
If you lose 10kg of fat, precisely 8.4kg comes out through your lungs and the remaining 1.6kg turns into water.”
22. I did not know that!
“Infants are born with approximately 300 bones, but as they grow some of these bones fuse together.
By the time they reach adulthood, they only have 206 bones and teeth are considered part of the skeletal system, but are not counted as bones.”
21. Bypass.
“Our bodies have the ability to perform there own bypass procedures. My grandfather went in for a scan and it showed a 100% blockage in one of his major arteries.
The image also showed a new portion of the artery starting .25” before the blockage and then rejoining the artery .25” after the blockage completely bypassing the obstructed portion.
He had never had surgery before this discovery.”
20. No one likes it.
“You don’t like the sound of your recorded voice because it’s missing the low frequency you’re used to hearing.
When you talk, you hear your voice as it goes to the air and back to you ear. It also goes through your skull to your ear, and this bone conduction mechanism transmits the low frequencies better than air does.
Your recorded voice only has the air transmitted sound. That causes the dissonance between what you think your voice sounds like, and what it really does. It’s also why your voice will (almost) always be higher pitch than you think.”
19. Not just chillin’.
“The appendix is not a vestigial organ. It actually protects good bacteria in the gut.
You can live without it, but it’s not just chillin’ in there.”
18. Full circle.
“Migraine pain can lessen from vomiting.
Vomiting can cause dehydration.
Dehydration can cause migraines.
The human body is funny.”
17. All about arteries.
“We all have a major artery called the ascending aortic artery that runs down the center of our abdomen. Another artery, called the superior mesenteric artery, branches off of that.
There is a gap between the arteries that is kept open by a pad of fat, and the start of our intestines, called the duodenum, passes right through the gap between the two arteries.
Very very rarely something can happen to shrink the fat pad, and then the arteries act like a clamp and pinch the duodenum closed. This prevents anything, solid or liquid, from passing from the stomach into the intestines.
This is called Superior Mesenteric Artery Syndrome, and I had it. It is so rare that it took 2 months of doctors excluding everything else for them to diagnose me.
I couldn’t keep anything down, and went from 120 to 90 lbs. I had to have where my intestines were connected to my stomach moved to another spot, and have about 6 feet removed in the process.
This was almost 7 years ago now. Other than having to eat more than I used to in order to maintain my weight, I’m okay. That is only one of the weird, and very rare, medical conditions that I’m living with, but you’d never know by looking at me.”
16. Uh oh.
“That the body’s ph is 7.35 to 7.45 and if any of those scam products that promise to “change the PH of your body” actually worked, you’d be d**d.”
15. Can’t see it.
“Each one of your eyes has a blind spot where the optic nerve exit your eye into your brain.
You can’t see it because your brain tricks you not to see, it covers the spot with some made up image of what it thinks fits better with the rest of it.”
14. Well, that’s odd.
“Humans are one of a few species of mammal that oddly don’t produce their own vitamin C due to lack of a certain enzyme.
Other mammalian species who exhibit this mutation are those contained in the main primate suborder Haplorhinni (monkeys, apes, tarsiers), as well as bats, capybaras, and guinea pigs.
All other mammals produce vitamin C in the liver.”
13. Only about 20%.
“Apparently about 20% of people have a bony ridge on the roof of their mouth. Most people’s palates are smooth with a very slight ridge.
The 20% like me have an exaggerated and more pronounced ridge. Apparently it’s most common in women and Asian folk, and I’m neither so that’s neat.
I always thought it was totally normal.”
12. Blood stuff.
“Positive blood type women can have positive and negative blood type babies without issue.
Negative blood type women require a shot with antibodies to prevent the mothers immune system from attacking the fetus if it is a positive blood type.”
11. It adapts.
“When you get conditioned to physical activity, your circulatory system adapts — more blood, more vessels, more blood cells. But your lungs really don’t.
This is because no matter how much blood your heart is able to deliver to your lungs, the lungs still have no problem oxygenating it.
This is why your oxygen saturation doesn’t drop during exercise (unless you have a heart defect.)”
10. Creepy.
“Your brain continues to try to revive the body long after the heart has stopped.
In some cases, there has been found brain activity trying to make repairs to bring the body back 30 hours later.
This is used to indicate time of death in m**der victims.”
9. Ouch.
“Babies can break their collarbone during delivery. It happens quite often, but heals quickly.
My teacher told me that (if it happened to you ofc) you may feel a slightly higher spot on your collarbone, called the callus where the fracture grew back together.”
8. A little bit different.
“Humans have, on average, just as many hairs on their body as chimpanzees.
Human hair is just a lot shorter and finer.”
7. The King.
“When you have a bowel movement, your heart rhythm shifts temporarily due to a vagus response.
The reason Elvis d**d on the toilet was because his heart was beating 200+ bpm and the quick rhythm change caused a myocardial infarction. People with low heart rates have been known to pass out on the toilet because their bodies can’t handle the shift.
It’s also why EMTs will absolutely not let you use the bathroom before getting on the ambulance. Especially if the bathroom is a standard 5’x8′.”
6. Amazing!
“A pregnant woman that has a mild heart attack will be healed from the baby’s stem cells, leaving virtually no tissue damage.”
5. Survival instinct.
“If you faint at the sight of your own blood you may have an oversensitive vasovagal response.
The theory is that this developed as a survival mechanism, kind of like an opossum playing d**d.”
4. I believe it.
“Humans feel less satisfaction when they don’t gain anything from an interaction.
In other words, you get less dopamine (or whatever feel good chemical) when you do something that basically has an equal cost and reward. This has lead me to believe that free food DOES really taste better.
It never made sense to me why cupcakes only tasted good when kids brought them in for their birthday. Whenever I’d buy them on my own they tasted worse. I guess it’s because my brain knows I spent money on them.”
3. Strength.
“Your brain regulates how strong your muscles are. If your leg muscles were to contract at full strength, they would snap your femur.
Its why people in emergencies on adrenaline can lift cars off children. Your body is capable of great strength, but it could also severely damage you, so your brain keeps you a weak, soft bag of jelly.”
2. You need that sleep.
“You will sooner d** from lack of sleep than lack of food.
You can live, depending on your current body fat and health level, for months without food.
Estimates are you that you will d** from lack of sleep within 2 weeks”
1. Pretty incredible.
“Your eyes have a separate immune system from the rest of your body.
On a lot of occasions if your body’s immune system finds your eyes, they will assume they are a foreign body and blind you.”
Do you know any interesting facts about the human body?
Please share them with us in the comments!
We’d love to hear from you!
The post 38 Fascinating Facts About the Human Body Most People Don’t Know appeared first on UberFacts.
In 1991 it was discovered…
In 1991 it was discovered that the heart has its “little brain” or “intrinsic cardiac nervous system.” This “heart brain” is composed of approximately 40,000 neurons that are alike neurons in the brain, meaning that the heart has its own nervous system.
The post In 1991 it was discovered… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
People Talk About Weird Quirks Their Bodies Have
We all have weird quirks with our bodies.
Some of us are double-jointed, some of us have webbed toes, and others have birthmarks that look like Elvis.
The possibilities are endless!
But they’re all unique in special in their own way…and also kind of weird.
Let’s get weird with some folks on AskReddit.
1. Blurred vision.
“I can blur my vision at will.
Apparently some people can and some can’t. Means we can see those 3D eye puzzles immediately by just changing our vision. Has something to do with depth of focus.
Also great for watching horror movies or graphic scenes. Looks like I’m watching but everything is blurred. It’s like a visual censor switch.”
2. Check this out.
“My spine is about 2 inches to the left of where it should be in my lower back.
Cool party trick.”
3. Interesting…
“I only sweat on one side of my face and have a green eye and a blue one.
It’s called Horner’s syndrome, had it since birth.”
4. A new thing.
“Several years ago I underwent bariatric surgery.
Ever since shortly after I eat I peel off a series of strong sneezes.
Apparently it’s called “gustatory rhinitis”. Never had that pre-surgery.”
5. Are you human?
“I can spread all of my toes out really far from each other, with none of them touching at all.
It sounds insignificant, but every person I show ends up giving me a big reaction.”
6. Some eye issues.
“My eyes are not level.
Makes sunglasses look crooked and hard to trim sideburns evenly.
Also my right eye tear duct weeps sometimes.”
7. To the right.
“My head is tilted to the right (by default lol not that I can’t tilt it to the other side, it’s just my normal resting position).
My parents told me that’s how it’s been since I was a baby. No problems with bones or muscles as they’ve had it checked for years.
Doctors say it might be caused by a muscle in my eye which makes me tilt my head to see lines as straight.
I’ve never met anyone with the same case.”
8. Thumbs.
“I was born with an extra thumb on my right hand.
Unfortunately it was removed because it wasn’t functional and hindered the other thumb, but the remaining thumb is very strangely shaped and has a gnarly scar.
It’s also mostly not functional.”
9. You’re lucky!
“I can eat anything I want and I don’t really seem to gain weight or get fat.
I’m almost 40, still eating donuts and pizza whenever I want, still crushing bags of candies and chips every night and still have a 6 pack and look better now than I did when I was in the gym 4-5 days a week in my 20’s. My body seems to have learned how to process junk food like it’s clean protein.
People think it’s odd and make comments about it pretty often when they see me eat. I get a kick out of their confusion and curiosity. My BIL’s professional medical opinion is that I have a false leg.
All my blood work comes back great on an annual basis too.”
10. Like a superpower.
“I heal surprisingly fast.
Wipe out on skateboard and get nasty, deep scrapes? Gone with a scar in a week or two.
Cut my finger? Fold the skin back over, don’t touch it, healed overnight”
11. Ahhhhh!
“I was born without a uvula and I can spit out of my nose through a hole in the front of my mouth.”
12. That’s annoying.
“I aggressively sneeze during and after every hot shower for at least 45 minutes straight.
It’s horrible.”
13. Crackin’ and poppin’.
“All of my joints crack, pop and grind.
I sound like a glowstick all the time, especially if I’ve been sitting for more than ten minutes.”
14. Pitch black.
“I have really good eyesight in the dark, like I couldn’t read a book in pitch darkness but I could see stuff.
It p*sses my fiancée off as I’ll walk into a room at night and everything’s pretty much visible so I don’t turn a light on.
If we’re going to bed and I do this she then follows expecting me to have turned the lamp on but nope because I think it’s pretty light still and then she ends up tripping over something because apparently it’s really dark ?”
15. Unusual.
“I can sleep while standing up.
I found this out during a summer bridge program I went to the summer before I started college. The counselors told us to stand up in the back if we ever got tired during class.
Little did I know just how tired I was going to get.”
Does your body have any odd quirks?
If so, please tell us about them in the comments.
We can’t wait to hear from you!
The post People Talk About Weird Quirks Their Bodies Have appeared first on UberFacts.
Feeling sick is part of the body’s…
Feeling sick is part of the body’s attempts to preserve energy for the immune system and make you act in a way that signals to nearby people that you need help 00
The post Feeling sick is part of the body’s… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
This Is How You Can Deal with Excessive Sweating
I sweat a lot. Probably too much, but what can I do about it?
Turns out there actually are some steps I can take to try to prevent over sweating. That’ll teach me to give up!
One easy thing you can try is to put on an antiperspirant before you go to bed at night. You should also try to avoid certain foods and drinks during your daily routine—for instance too much coffee can have an effect on your central nervous system and cause you to sweat more than usual. Drinking hot coffee might even make it worse because the heat of the drink increases your body temperature, which might make you sweat even more.
Other foods you might want to avoid: spicy foods. This one is tough for me because I love Indian food, Mexican food, and Vietnamese food, but if this is the price of less sweat, I suppose I can manage.
As Scientific American explains:
“Spicy foods excite the receptors in the skin that normally respond to heat. Those receptors are pain fibers, technically known as polymodal nociceptors… The central nervous system can be confused or fooled when these pain fibers are stimulated by a chemical, like that in chili peppers, which triggers an ambiguous neural response. The central nervous system reacts to whatever the sensory system tells it is going on. Therefore, the pattern of activity from pain and warm nerve fibers triggers both the sensations and the physical reactions of heat, including vasodilation, sweating and flushing”
If your excessive sweat results in body odor, there are other things you can do to try to keep that under control. Besides using deodorant, you should avoid foods that cause people to stink, like cabbage, broccoli, onions, garlic, and cauliflower. Alcohol also smells when you sweat it out, so you might want to cut down on the booze (that’s really not a bad idea for any person).
If you’ve tried everything, but you still sweat all the time, you can wear certain colors to hide your sweat (it’s not idea, we know). Very dark clothes and very light clothes hide sweat pretty well, so you can wear black, dark blue, and even white. You should avoid grays and bright colors if you’re gonna be out in the sun or somewhere you know you’ll be sweating because those colors practically highlight sweat stains. You could also consider wearing more athleisure, as it tends to be made from sweat-wicking textiles.
Try these tips out and see if they do the trick for you. If all else fails, go see your doctor. There are some genuine medical issues associated with excess sweating, although they are rare.
Good luck out there and stay cool!
The post This Is How You Can Deal with Excessive Sweating appeared first on UberFacts.
You Can Make Money by Selling These 5 Body Parts
There are a whole bunch of body parts you can sell to make some cash. We’re not talking about an arm and a leg here, but instead, things that you can sell and still get on with your day (and your life).
Take a look at this list; you might be surprised.
And you might want to make a little extra money!
1. Hair
That’s right, you can sell your hair. In case you haven’t noticed, the industry surrounding baldness is HUGE, and people are always buying wigs that are made of real human hair.
Long hair that has not been altered by various salon processes is the most sought-after and will get you the most money.
2. Plasma
The part of blood that carries blood cells to different parts of the body can be sold for about $30 to $40 per visit. Not the most righteous bucks in the world, but not bad if you’re in a pinch. The process of donating plasma is quite different from giving blood, so read up on it before you go if you decide to do it.
3. Sperm
If you want to donate sperm, be prepared to go once a week for up to a year if you get approved by a sperm bank. That could mean up to $1,500 extra per month, fellas.
4. Eggs
If a woman is willing to sell her eggs, she can make some real cash. The process is lengthy and intrusive, but depending on how you feel about injections and invasive exams, the payout could be worth it. An egg retrieval cycle can take up to 3-4 weeks and women can earn over $10,000.
5. Skin
This is an unusual one because obviously we don’t literally mean you can remove section of your skin and sell them.
Marketing types out there are going so far as to use people’s bodies to advertise products using henna tattoos. Some athletes are being paid up to $100,000 to allow companies to advertise on their skin. Of course, henna doesn’t last forever, but there are some companies that will pay people to get their logo permanently tattooed on their body. That seems a little crazy to me…
People can also make money by selling bone marrow and breast milk as well.
The post You Can Make Money by Selling These 5 Body Parts appeared first on UberFacts.
People Share Embarrassing School Moments When Teachers and Periods Collided
The ladies reading this have been here.
You’re sitting in class, minding your own biz… and then it hits. That time of the month.
A moment of panic? Yes. You ask to use the restroom. Teacher says no.
Wait… what?!
If you’re anything like these 15 students, that day was not a good day.
Let’s take a look…
1. Murdered dead
2. Huh… guess she’s a great liar!
3. Yikes!
4. What the hell is a “no bathroom” rule?!
5. Ewwwwwww….
6. Boom. Savage.
7. Well, you probably ARE an actress…
8. Payback is a…
9. Don’t ever do this if you’re a teacher…
10. A comedy of errors…
11. What a dick!
12. HAHAHAHAHA… this one!
13. Well, that’s good improvisation…
14. Good!
15. That’s always an option…
If you’re a teacher… HOW do you not know how to handle something like this?!
Come on people…
The post People Share Embarrassing School Moments When Teachers and Periods Collided appeared first on UberFacts.
Dean Karnazescan run without ever…
Dean Karnazescan can run without ever getting tired due to his exponentially high lactate threshold. He was able to run a Marathon in the south pole at -25C and run for three consecutive nights before having to stop for sleep.