Think about having a face lift on legs. Your skin could only be tighter, if not same lol
Quote from: SuchLL on February 21, 2022, 07:36:57 AMThis should be the top comment
Sorry English isn't my first language, is skin sags same thing as skin grows wrinkles?
Quote from: PursuerOfHeight on February 20, 2022, 09:53:57 PMMind citing the resource of this kind of stuffs? IMO it's very impossible cuz the regenerated bones are 'calluses' not actualy 'bones' so I can't figure out why they are the same in every aspect.
The regenerated bones are bones, not calluses. You are talking about the middle stage of bone healing, called callus formation. Bone remodeling is the final stage, which will ultimately result in regeneration of normal bone structure. I will share one article here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551678/. You can easily find plenty of studies talking about bone remodeling.
If you talk about performance, I think it’s the tibia to femur ratio playing a big role since it’s the only thing staying abnormal after recovery. Normal tibia to femur ratio is 80% because of evolution and it must work best for us. There’s no way abnormal ratio works as great as normal ratio. However the performance difference is probably negligible to most people since most people are far away from reaching their athletic potential…
Quote from: ilovescience on February 21, 2022, 07:43:14 AMSorry English isn't my first language, is skin sags same thing as skin grows wrinkles?
I had never thought about sagging skin on legs. I thought we had the same “what is that??” reaction…
I think op referred to skin sag in old people. No don't worry about it. If anything, your skin should be more stretched out
Quote from: SuchLL on February 21, 2022, 08:22:32 AMThe regenerated bones are bones, not calluses. You are talking about the middle stage of bone healing, called callus formation. Bone remodeling is the final stage, which will ultimately result in regeneration of normal bone structure. I will share one article here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551678/. You can easily find plenty of studies talking about bone remodeling.
If you talk about performance, I think it’s the tibia to femur ratio playing a big role since it’s the only thing staying abnormal after recovery. Normal tibia to femur ratio is 80% because of evolution and it must work best for us. There’s no way abnormal ratio works as great as normal ratio. However the performance difference is probably negligible to most people since most people are far away from reaching their athletic potential…
Thx for your rectifications and sorry for my misconceptions.
Thanks for the thoughts. Like SuchLL said, regrown bone is 100% but i can;t find about skin.
My supposition is that
leg skin, if it's sagged, will pull your belly skin down as well, and eventually your neck, face skin too making you look much older later.
Have any idea about this?
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