Does the brain replace itself every 7 years?

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The discussion clarifies the misconception that the body completely replaces itself every seven years, emphasizing that this is not true for the brain. While some brain regeneration occurs, most neurons remain unchanged since early childhood, which is crucial for retaining childhood memories. Different cells in the body have varying lifespans; for instance, sperm cells last about three days, colon cells four days, and red blood cells around four months. The replacement rate of heart cells decreases significantly with age, and few neurons are replaced throughout life, with neurogenesis occurring mainly in specific brain areas like the hippocampus. Participants also recommend using reliable sources, such as the NIH, for accurate information on human biology and cell turnover, and suggest using Google search modifiers for better results.
black hole 123
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i read somewhere the body replace itself every 7 years. does the brain also do this?
 
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Generally no. Some regeneration and growth of brain (new synapses etc) continue for entire life, but most of the brain cells are the same since early childhood - or we would be unable to retain childhood memories which are saved as deposits of proteins within neurons.
 
The whole idea is a myth, the reality is that the many different cells in the body are replaced at very different rates, and some like the neurones in the cerebral cortex are not replaced at all in adulthood.

Some examples; sperm cells only last around 3 days, cells lining the colon, 4 days, red blood cells last around 4 months, while white blood cells can live around a year. The rate also changes as we age cells in the heart (cardiomyocytes) are replaced at around 1% a year in young adults but this rate is halved by the age of 70. For most people this means that over half of these cells will never be replaced over their lifespan. It seems that few neurons are replaced over our lifespan though there may be some neurogenesis in very specific areas of the brain like the hippocampus.
 
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@black hole 123 -
The next time you pose a question please consider giving us the source. It is clear that your source was very wrong.

Also consider: when you want to find something in medicine or human biology try a search on NIH. They have wonderful high quality references there, and their general white papers for public consumption are excellent. Prepend "site:NIH" to your google search example:

"site:nih.gov your search term(s) " --- without the quotes, I had to add them to get this to display correctly
 
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I have a dry patch of skin on my face, my concern is this means a high cell turn overate and is "aging" much faster than the rest of my face! o_O
 
jim mcnamara said:
@black hole 123 -
The next time you pose a question please consider giving us the source. It is clear that your source was very wrong.

Also consider: when you want to find something in medicine or human biology try a search on NIH. They have wonderful high quality references there, and their general white papers for public consumption are excellent. Prepend "site:NIH" to your google search example:

"site:nih.gov your search term(s) " --- without the quotes, I had to add them to get this to display correctly

Just wanted to mention you can append your google search with the site:<url> search modifier. Here's a list of other modifiers for the Google novices: https://moz.com/learn/seo/search-operators
 
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