5.Your body contains highly corrosive liquid
4.Your fungus can get way out of control
Our bodies are fungal. We harbor 100 different species of foot fungus. On an average day, that's where the majority of body fungus will remain. However, sometimes yeast gets out of control and the body shows symptoms of candidiasis. This is more widely known as yeast infection. Fungus may grow in the stomach, urinary tract, vagina, or tongue, or even on the skin. One of the most revolting among these is thrush—yeast infection or candidiasis of the mouth. The curd-like fungus grows in patches on your tongue and palate. It's easily treated, but while visible, thrush is a filthy reminder of the candida albicans fungus always living in your mouth. This is only one of various things that can thrive and multiply on or inside of you.
3.You're crawling with bacteria
Nine out of every ten bacteria in the human body are microbial. That's a massive number, considering the fact that 100 trillion bacteria live in your body. Only ten percent of those cells are human. You might not be able to see or feel your creepy-crawly friends, but they're definitely present. You couldn't survive without them. There are so many that "all the bacteria living inside you would fill a half-gallon jug." Occasionally, one bacterium will cause serious problems for the host. That's you. For example, the vast majority of humans have demodex in their eyelashes, which are miniscule mites. These acarids have long, non-segmented bodies and eight legs in the adult stage. They make their home in your eyelash hair follicles and live off sebum. Usually we don't notice demodex, but a high increase in numbers can lead to bothersome medical issues such as blapharitis. Invisible-to-the-eye organisms harm people often. They can even be lethal. In 2010, John Matthews of Iowa began losing his vision when a parasitic worm inhabited and munched on his left eye. Despite cases like his, the average bacteria in our body still do more good than harm.
2.Non-human bacteria will devour you—dead or alive
Necrotizing fasciitis is the flesh-eating bacteria from your worst zombie nightmares. This type of infection requires a quick response, because it regularly leads to organ failure, the need for amputation, and death. Necrotizing fasciitis typically strikes following trauma or post-surgery. Once you're infected, the bacteria become a very dangerous part of you. The cause can be as simple as a small cut, where bacteria enter, often combined with a compromised immune system. People with diabetes and cancer patients are especially susceptible. Those with strong immune systems who disinfect their wounds are unlikely to contract necrotizing fasciitis. Even if flesh-eating bacteria don't consume you when you're alive, though, there are plenty in your intestinal tract that will find you extra-tasty after you've died. They are just waiting to work their way from the inside, out. This process is called putrefaction.1. You can regurgitate poop
1.You can regurgitate poop
Poop vomit may begin with fecal impaction. A colon blockage makes it so the body can't excrete waste. This blockage causes new waste to build up since there's nowhere else for it to go. Eventually, it exits the body through the mouth. Another possibility is atypical contraction of gastric muscles, which can carry fecal matter upward from the intestines, to the stomach, and out through the mouth. This process is also known as copremesis or stercoraceous vomiting. Our bodies can certainly surprise us. Sometimes those surprises are pleasant, and other times, such as when we're vomiting poop, the human body can seem rather revolting.
翻译:哈利小王子 来源:前十网