this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2024
586 points (98.0% liked)
hmmm
4774 readers
9 users here now
For things that are "hmmm".
Rule 1: All post titles except for meta posts should be just plain "hmmm" and nothing else, no emotes, no capitalisation, no extending it to "hmmmm" etc.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I don't know why it bothers me that it's "dead" hair, because effectively nothing has changed. It's like a pseudo wig that isn't trying to hide anything, which is super cool
The moment your hair cells leave the pores on the skin of your head, they die. Thud all hair is dead.
Even before that. You pull a hair out, and if that specific hair follicle was still growing you should see a teeny-tiny bulb at the very end. That bulb can be up to a mm beneath the skin. The widest part of that bulb is where the hair cells begin dying and drying out. By the time it shrinks down to the width of the rest of the hair (and long before it emerges from the pore), all the cells in that section are dead. Only the base of the bulb has living, growing hair cells.
Wait, I thought hair was made of keratin like nails. It's made of cells?
Are you implying that your fingernails were never cells of your body? How does that work?
Well I'll have to look it up now, but I see it as a substance produced by the body that isn't made of cells itself. Like any of the other excretions and things the body makes.
Edit: apparently both your nails and hair are mostly made of keratin, but keratin isn't produced and excreted to produce the nail and hair structures like a playdough factory like I imagined. Special cells are produced that are primarily keratin and they are added to like a chain and die/harden as they are pushed out from the body.
That is absolutely fascinating. I had the same assumption.
Damn, well that is interesting
I'd guess both are made of cells with lots of keratin in them, though i am making this up as i go.
Gross!!!
Guys, should we tell him about skin?
You mean the one where your skin cells get replaced every month or so?
Or the fact that the entire couple outer layers are dead cells
Hairs are never "alive" in the first place. The follicle is.
That's why they used the quotes and said that nothing effectively changed.