Bones, marrow, myeloid tissue, fatty tissue, red bone marrow, yellow bone marrow, B-cells, T-cells, stem cells, mesenchymal cells, hematopoietic cells.
Bone marrow is a soft spongy material that is inside some bones, including the hips and thigh bones.
Bone marrow is a soft tissue that sits inside the centre of bones. There are two types of bone marrow:
Bone marrow also houses stem cells. These are cells that have no function. You can read more about them in the DNA section (find a link in the Related Pages section).
Here is a YouTube video from Seeker explaining about bone marrow:
B-cells are so-called because they mature in the bone marrow, whereas T-cells are so-called because they mature in the Thymus gland.
So, bone marrow is quite important, even in our day-to-day life. Without it, we would not have enough blood cells in our cirulatory system. There are treatments for those that have issues with their bone marrow. Bone marrow transplants can be carried out, and can replace non-functioning bone marrow due to conditions such as leukemia or sickle cell anaemia.
As you get older, the bone marrow changes from having a lot of red marrow, which creates the blood cells, to having a lot of yellow marrow, which stores fats. Most bones in the body, and by the time you reach adulthood, will have yellow bone marrow in them, instead of red bone marrow.
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