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arthritis genetic

arthritis genetic
Why are there so many human diseases?

I'm studying pharmacy and I am surprised by how many there are human diseases (for example, heart disease, cancer [more than 200 types], diabetes, epilepsy, arthritis, infections [so many], genetic diseases, diseases mental [the list of mental illnesses is very large], autoimmune diseases (it is rare that your systems to attack their defense ends it was designed to protect) and many more. I ask myself what is the human body so fragile? Is there a purpose for all these diseases?

Fragile? Given abuses of most of us put our bodies through at some point (and, sometimes, ongoing), I think the human body is incredibly resilient. And I say this as someone who suffers chronic but tolerable disease. If you have a clock on a single function, it is no surprise when he finally does not keep time. If you MFP has a clock indicating the time, projected on the wall, wakes you up at random tunes on your iPod (which also charges), and fixed by synchronizing with the atomic clock … well, almost not be surprised if more than one of these functions stops working at some point. Now think about the human body-one system multitasking more complex than could ever imagine. There are so many hundreds of thousands of functions in constant operation would not be surprising if there were many diseases that affected.

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