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  2. What Are Boogers? Composition, Bodily Function, and More - ...

    www.healthline.com/health/what-are-boogers

    Boogers are made up of mucus that has collected particles of dust, pollen, bacteria, and other substances and drained into your nose, where exposure to the air has dried it.

  3. What Are Boogers Made Of? Texture and Function - Verywell Health

    www.verywellhealth.com/what-are-boogers-made-of-5093832

    What Are Boogers? If you think of the nose as an air filter for our body, then boogers are the stuff that gets caught in the filter. They're a combination of mucus, dirt, air pollutants, bacteria, viruses, and dead skin cells that gets captured by our nose hairs and then dries out.

  4. What Are Boogers? Why Do We Get Them? - Scripps Health

    www.scripps.org/news_items/6831-5-fun-facts-about-boogers

    Everybody has dried nasal mucus or nose boogers. A Scripps pediatrician explains what boogers are and what they say about your health.

  5. How to Remove Deep Boogers, and What Causes Them - Healthline

    www.healthline.com/health/how-to-remove-deep-boogers

    Boogers are pieces of drying mucus that contain trapped dirt or bacteria. These contaminants come into your nasal passages when you breathe.

  6. What Are Boogers Made of? Meaning, Function, and Colors - Health

    www.health.com/condition/cold/what-are-boogers

    Boogers are pieces of dried nasal mucus that trap air pollutants, bacteria, dirt, pollen, and other harmful substances. Your body often produces more mucus than usual if you have a bacterial or...

  7. What Are Boogers? | WebMD - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFwQ7RytudI

    Learn more about what mucus could say about your health: https://wb.md/35ge93IHave you ever wondered why or how boogers form? See what exactly that dried muc...

  8. How do boogers form in your nose? - HowStuffWorks

    health.howstuffworks.com/human-body/systems/nose-throat/boogers-form-in-nose.htm

    Whether you know them as a "bat in the cave," or a "nose goblin," there's a good reason for boogers — even when they sticks around in gelatinous little lumps. The lining of the nose and sinuses — also known as the epithelium — produce at least 1 quart (1 liter) of mucus each day.

  9. What Exactly are Boogers and Why Do Kids Eat Them? - UnityPoint...

    www.unitypoint.org/news-and-articles/what-are-boogers-why-boogers-are-good-for...

    What are Boogers? Our body makes boogers to protect us from viruses and irritating particles in the environment. All boogers are made of dried out mucus. Our bodies produce mucus, a slimy substance that's mostly water, salt and protective immune cells.

  10. What's a Booger? (for Kids) | Nemours KidsHealth

    kidshealth.org/en/kids/booger.html

    When the mucus, dirt, and other debris get dry and clump together, you're left with a booger. Boogers can be squishy and slimy or tough and crumbly. Everybody gets them, so they're not a big deal. In fact, boogers are a sign that your nose is working the way it should!

  11. What Are Boogers? (for Kids) | Nemours KidsHealth

    kidshealth.org/en/kids/word-boogers.html

    Boogers are made of dried mucus, dust, pollen, and dirt. They can be squishy or hard, but they do an important job — they help keep that bad stuff from getting into your lungs. Boogers are full of germs, so it's a good idea not to pick them (blow them out into a tissue instead).