You can usually know and tell if you have damaged your organs by the signs and symptoms of organ damage.
The signs and symptoms of organ damage are accumulation of fluids, difficulty breathing, chest pain, feeling lightheaded or dizzy, sweating which is common in heart organ damage.
In lung organ damage the signs of lung organ damage are chest pain, coughing up blood, hoarseness, difficulty breathing and low blood pressure and weakness.
The common signs of damaged organs include.
Weakness, faintness or fatigue.
Drowsiness or loss of consciousness.
Difficulty concentrating, confusion.
Loss of appetite.
Nausea and vomiting.
Fast, shallow breathing.
Fast or irregular heartbeat.
Fever, chills.
End organ damage is severe impairment of major body organs due to systemic disease.
Commonly this is referred to in diabetes, high blood pressure, or states of low blood pressure or low blood volume.
Chronic organ failure is sometimes reversible in the early stages if you're able to treat the original cause effectively.
However, the later stages are generally marked by irreversible damage, such as fibrosis (scarring in your organs) or tissue death.
Organ failure symptoms include low grade fever, tachycardia, and tachypnea in the first 24 hours.
Within the following 24-72 hours, lung failure may set in.
This can be followed by bacteremia, as well as renal, intestinal, and liver failure.
Every organ system is important for the body and if one of them stops working the entire body would collapse and be dysfunctional.
Every organ is dependent on other organs.
For example, the impaired and diminished function of the digestive system affects other organs like the kidney.
Some tissues such as skin, the vas deferens, and large organs including the liver can regrow quite readily, while others have been thought to have little or no capacity for regeneration following an injury.
Numerous tissues and organs have been induced to regenerate.
Bladders have been 3D-printed in the lab since 1999.