What does a spinal cord do?
Answers:
The spine is the column of bones that lets you stand up.
Inside this column of bones are all the nerves that you need to move and have your body function.
If you injure your spinal colum you can end up being paralyzed. Depending on where the injury occurs decides if you only lose the use of your legs or if you lose both the use of legs and arms or you could be completely paralyzed and not be able to even turn your head.
The spinal cord is the elongated bundle of nervous tissue that carries nerve impulses between the brain and the rest of the body.
dont know.
"The spine works as the main support for the spinal cord and the nerve pathways that carry information from the arms, legs, and rest of the body, and carries signals from the brain to the body.
Your back is composed of 33 bones called vertebrae, 31 pairs of nerves, 40 muscles and numerous connecting tendons and ligaments running from the base of your skull to your tailbone. Between your vertebrae are fibrous, elastic cartilage called discs. These "shock absorbers" keep your spine flexible and cushion the hard vertebrae as you move...."
Read more at:
http://www.spinalinjury.net/html/_anatom...
it keeps you toghether and so u can walk sit up . live its connected to ur brain with out it u wouldnt b able to do anything. its ur bodys phone so u know what to do. when to breath blink everything.
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