The
Lungs
Lung
structure and function:
What makes you breathe?
How
do you breathe?
How does oxygen get into the bloodstream?
Author’s Note:
Lung
structure and function:
Every part of your
body needs oxygen we breathe in order to survive. The lungs are designed to
absorb oxygen from the air and transfer it into the bloodstream. The lung is
a gas exchange apparatus. Its prime function is to allow oxygen to move from
air we breathe into the blood stream and remove carbon dioxide to move out.
The lung does other jobs too, it metabolizes some compounds, filter toxic materials
from the air, act as a reservoir for blood, and in conjunction with kidney maintain
the acid/base balance.
The lungs are found
inside the chest and are protected by the rib cage. Between the ribs are muscles
that are essential for breathing. The most important muscle of breathing is
called the diaphragm. It is dome shaped and lies below the lungs separating
them from the abdomen. Two thin layers of tissue called the pleura cover each
lung and the inside of the rib cage.
The lungs are made
up of several sections called lobes - three on the right and two on the left.
The inside of your lungs looks like a giant sponge. It is a mass of fine tubes,
the smallest of which end in tiny air sacs called alveoli. These air sacs have
very thin walls which surrendered by hundreds of tiny blood vessels called capillaries.
There are 200 million or so of these air sacs, and if they were to spread out
they would cover a piece of ground roughly the size of a tennis court.
What makes you breathe?
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The breathing centre
in the brain is constantly receiving signals from the body about the amount
of oxygen which is needed. This will depend on how active you are. When you
are asleep you will need far less oxygen than when you are running to catch
a bus. When you are asleep you will breathe more slowly and when you are running
you will breathe more quickly.
Once the brain
knows how much oxygen is needed it sends messages along nerves to the breathing
muscles so that the right amount of air is breathed into the lungs.
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How
do you breathe?
Your lungs have
no muscles themselves. Breathing occurs when the breathing centre in the brain
sends a message along the nerves to your breathing muscles. The muscles contract
and you breathe in. Your diaphragm is pulled flat and, at the same time, the
muscles between your ribs shorten and pull your ribcage upwards and outwards.
This ensures that the lungs have the largest possible amount of space to expand
into.
Each time you breathe,
air is drawn into your nose or mouth down through your throat and into your
windpipe, or trachea. The windpipe is a tube about ten to twelve centimeters
long in adults, and splits into two smaller air tubes called the bronchi, one
of which goes to the left lung and the other to the right lung.
The air passes
down the bronchi which divide another 15 to 25 times into thousands of smaller
and smaller airways, called bronchioles, until the air reaches the alveoli.
Breathing out is
usually just a matter of relaxing the diaphragm and the muscles between the
ribs so that the air is pushed out and the lungs return to their resting size.
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How does oxygen get into the bloodstream?
Inside the alveoli,
oxygen moves across the paper thin walls of tiny blood vessels, called capillaries,
and into the blood, where it is picked up by chemicals in the red blood cells
ready to be carried around the body. At the same time, a waste product from
the body called carbon dioxide comes out of the capillaries back into the alveoli,
ready to be breathed out.
Freshly oxygenated
blood is carried from the lungs to the heart which pumps blood around the body
through the arteries. Once the oxygen has been used up in the tissues of the
body, the blood returns, through the veins, to the heart. It is then pumped
to the lungs so that the carbon dioxide can be removed and more oxygen taken
up.
Author’s Note:
As seen above,
the lung is a vital organ as it plays a major role in sustaining life. The problem
with this design is that the input and output pipe are the same. Unlike fishes
that breathe though their mouth and exhale the waste through thier gill, we
breathe in and out through the same pipe.
Diseases associated
with the lung varies from genetic disorders to acquired diseases.
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Note: education