What part of you is only 1% to 3% of your body’s mass, yet uses 20%
of all the oxygen you breathe? Your brain! Here are ten more brain
facts.
- Your brain needs a continuous supply of oxygen. A 10 minute loss of
oxygen will usually cause significant neural damage. Cold can lengthen
this time, which is why cold-water drowning victims have been revived
after as nuch as 40 minutes – without brain damage.
- Your brain uses a fifth of all your blood. It needs it to keep up
with the heavy metabolic demands of its neurons. It needs not only the
glucose that is delivered, but of course, the oxygen.
- Your brain feels no pain. There are no nerves that register pain
within the brain itself. Because of this, neurosurgeons can probe the
brain while a patient is conscious (what fun!). By doing this, they can
use feedback from the patient to identify important regions, such as
those used for speech, or visualization.
- The cerebellum is sometimes called the “little brain,” and weighs
about 150 grams (a little over five ounces). Found at the lower back
side of your brain, you need your cerebellum to maintain posture, to
walk, and to perform any coordinated movements. It may also play a role
in your sense of smell.
- The human brain weighs an average of a little over three pounds, or
1.4 kilograms. Albert Einstein’s brain may have been smaller than
yours, because he was smaller than average. There is a general
correlation between body size and the size of our brains.
- An elephant’s brain is huge – about six times as large as a human
brain. However, in relation to body size, humans have the largest brain
of all the animals, averaging about 2% of body weight. A cat’s brain? It
weighs about one ounce, a little over 1% of body weight.
- There are about 100,000 miles of blood vessels in the brain. If
they were stretched out (there’s a nice thought!) they would circle the
earth more than four times.
- If you have an average sized brain, you have about 100 billion
neurons up there. You’ll be happy about that after reading the next
item.
- Approximately 85,000 neocortical neurons are lost each day in your
brain. Fortunately, this goes unnoticed due to the built-in redundancies
and the fact that even after three years this loss adds up to less than
1% of the total. Oh, and look at the next item.
- Recent research proves that your brain continues to produce new
neurons throughout your life. It also proves that it does so in response
to stimulation (do those brainpower exercises). Scientists refer to
this as brain plasticity or neuro-plasticity. You may find this one the
most encouraging of these brain facts.
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