It constantly relines it's self, your body is continually repairing it's self at a rate that, if stopped, would mean you'd die not long after.
It's doing it at a molecular level as well, watching for errors in the transcription of DNA and free radicals escaping for the electron chains in the mitrochondria, and countless other places.
The prime reason for dying is being a live. Eventually the damage from things like metabolism and everyday activity gets too much, and disease appears. Alzheimers is just a build up of neuronal plaques that are cleared out of the way usually, but some isn't, and it collects.
pH drops very rapidly with a few drops of acid in water. But the pH alone isn't enough to say it'll digest a chunk of wood. I could have a solution with a pH of 1 with so little acid actually in it, it would barely do anything.
To reduce wood to carbon, for metabolism, you'd be after a strong dehydrating acid like sulphuric.
Acid's don't always behave in the way you'd expect them to. Hydrofluoric acid will dissolve laboratory glass, but can't escape a plastic cup.
I've used 98%, boiling sulphuric mixed with other things to clean laboratory glassware. It'll turn a big wad of tissue into a bubbling tar in a second or two, with lots of fun hissing and steaming. But then, the acid won't react with other things until it's diluted down a little.
There are also super acids, combinations of two components, that have pH's down to -25. One of the first one's was given the nickname Magic, because it could dissolve a candle; something a normal acid can't do.