Íà ãëàâíóþ ñòðàíèöó ñàéòà
· Íàø ìàãàçèí · Îáúÿâëåíèÿ · Ðåéòèíã · Ñòàòüè · ×àñòîòû · Êîïèëêà · Àýðîäðîìû · Live!
· Ôàéëû · Äèàïàçîíû · Ñèãíàëû · Ìóçåé · Mods · LPD-ôîðóì · Êëóá · Ðàäèîñòàíöèè
Íà ñàéòå: ãîñòåé - 39,
ó÷àñòíèêîâ - 3 [ andory, John79, Mixa]
 · Íà÷àëî · Îïðîñû · Ñîáûòèÿ · Ñòàòèñòèêà · Ïîèñê · Ðåãèñòðàöèÿ · Ïðàâèëà · FAQ ·Â Ãàëåðåÿ ·

Thoracic Spinal Nerve //free\\ -

It’s not magic. It’s your T1–T12 thoracic spinal nerves, working silently, 24/7, so you don’t have to think about breathing, sweating, or feeling.

The visceral organs (heart, liver, stomach) share the same spinal cord segments (T1–T12) as the skin on your back and chest. The brain is lazy. It assumes: "Signal from T4? That must be the chest wall… oh wait, it’s actually the heart." thoracic spinal nerve

When people think of nerves, they usually focus on the brain, the spine, or the sciatica in their leg. But tucked away in the 12 segments of your mid-back lies a nervous system marvel: the Thoracic Spinal Nerves (T1–T12) . It’s not magic

They are the quiet, reliable middle child of the spinal column—and absolutely fascinating. Next time someone complains of mid-back pain, ask: "Which thoracic dermatome? T4 is the nipple line, T10 is the belly button. Let's map it." The brain is lazy


Ñîçäàâàòü ñîîáùåíèÿ ìîãóò òîëüêî çàðåãèñòðèðîâàííûå ó÷àñòíèêè ôîðóìà.
Âîéòè â ôîðóì :: » Ëîãèí » Ïàðîëü
Íà÷àëî
thoracic spinal nerve Ñðåäñòâà ñâÿçè, ðàöèè. Êóïèòü ðàäèîñòàíöèè Motorola, Yaesu, Vertex, ïðèåìíèêè, àíòåííû.
Âðåìÿ çàãðóçêè ñòðàíèöû (ñåê.): 0.139; miniBB®