ScienceIQ.com

What is Headache?

When a person has a headache, several areas of the head can hurt, including a network of nerves that extends over the scalp and certain nerves in the face, mouth, and throat. The muscles of the head and the blood vessels found along the surface and at the base of the brain are also sensitive to pain because they contain delicate nerve fibers. The ...

Continue reading...

WhatisHeadache
Biology

How Blood Clots

Scabby knees and bruised shins are as much a part of growing up as climbing trees. Minor injuries from paper cuts to skinned elbows are nothing to worry about for most people, because the blood's ... Continue reading

BloodClots
Biology

What Are Blood Types, and Why Are They Important?

If your medical report reads A, Rh+, M, s, P1, Lua, K+, Kp(a-b+), Le(a-b+). Fy(a+), Jk(a+b+), don't run for a foreign language dictionary. The letters aren't Greek. They are simply the names given to ... Continue reading

BloodTypes
Chemistry

Nitrogen Gas and Compounds

Nitrogen is a very interesting element. It is the seventh element of the periodic table, with seven electrons in its atoms. The somewhat unique combination of electronic structure and small atomic ... Continue reading

NitrogenGasandCompounds
Geology

The San Andreas Fault

Scientists have learned that the Earth's crust is fractured into a series of 'plates' that have been moving very slowly over the Earth's surface for millions of years. Two of these moving plates meet ... Continue reading

TheSanAndreasFault

Regeneration 101

Regeneration101So who is the greatest regeneration superhero of all? Among vertebrates the lowly salamander is the champion 'comeback kid.' We humans are pitiful by comparison. We can often regrow the tip of a finger if only half an inch or so is cut off (the last joint must remain). The salamander will regrow a complete leg if it is cut off! The process of regeneration begins with the formation of a clump of dividing cells at the wound site. This group of cells is called a blastema, and is different from a scar. These cells proliferate and then develop into the new limb, in a process very similar to the way the limb developed in the embryo. First the thigh, then the lower leg, and last the feet and toes (or fingers) grow. The regrowth takes several weeks to complete, but eventually the new limb will be just as good as the one that was lost.

The salamander is the only vertebrate that is any good at regeneration, although many invertebrates can also do it. Cockroaches can grow new legs. Starfish can grow new arms. A lowly flatworm called a planarian can be cut into over a hundred little pieces, and each will regenerate nearly an entire new body.

Naturally we wish people were better at regeneration, and scientists are working to learn more about how salamanders do it. A mutant mouse has been discovered that can regenerate its heart. This and other studies are showing that forming a blastema instead of a scar is a critical first step in regeneration.