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This is what the budding buds of a garden poppy look like.
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A very nice MRI scan of a pregnant woman at 32 weeks.
If you look closely, you can see the tiny organs of the fetus.
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Skin doesn't just cover our body
The largest organ of our body (skin weighs between 3.5 and 10 kilograms) has three layers:
The epidermis:
It acts as a protective barrier and is regularly renewed.
Dermis:
The skin itself, formed by connective tissue. It provides strength to the skin and also contains sebaceous and sweat glands.
Hypodermis or subcutaneous fatty tissue:
It is responsible for thermoregulation as well as the accumulation and storage of "stores" of fat.
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An animation demonstrating the anatomy of lowering and raising the mandible.
The lower jaw is lowered by the neck muscles (supragingival group) and raised by the deep part of the masseter muscle, the anterior and medial bundles of the temporalis muscle and the medial pterygid muscle in bilateral contraction.
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Sweat doesn't smell, bacteria does.
Sweat itself does not smell. The main cause of the odor under the arms is bacteria. They absorb chemical compounds that are in the sweat itself and on the skin, and then process them into substances that have a recognizable odor.
The composition of bacteria is different for each person, so everyone's sweat smells different. And the intensity of the odor usually depends on how much a person sweats. That is, the more sweat, the more favorable conditions for bacteria.
Alcohol and spices such as garlic, onions, cumin and curry noticeably change the odor of sweat. Also - meat food.
In addition, experts from the American Academy of Dermatology point out that foods with monosodium glutamate, caffeine (chocolate, coffee, tea), hot sauces, spices and alcohol can cause excessive sweating.
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U.S. molecular biologists have created a dual gene therapy based on the Nobel Prize-winning CRISPR/Cas9 genomic editor that simultaneously cleanses infected cells of most traces of HIV and changes the DNA of healthy immune cells so that they become invulnerable to the virus' attacks, Temple University Press.
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Three-dimensional computed tomography of the nose to evaluate nasal structures and anomalies.
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Three-dimensional computed tomography of the nose to evaluate nasal structures and anomalies.
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Three-dimensional computed tomography of the nose to evaluate nasal structures and anomalies.
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