The lungs take in oxygen. The
body's cells need oxygen to live and carry out their normal functions. They also get
rid
of carbon dioxide. This is a waste product of the cells.
The lungs are 2 cone-shaped organs.
They're made up of spongy, pinkish-gray tissue. They take up most of the space in
the
chest, or the thorax (the part of the body between the base of the neck and diaphragm).
They're inside a membrane called the pleura.
The lungs are separated by an area
(mediastinum) that has:
The right lung has 3 lobes. The
left lung has 2 lobes. When you breathe, the air:
-
Enters the body through the
nose or mouth
-
Travels down the throat
through the voice box and windpipe
-
Goes into the lungs through
tubes (mainstem bronchi):
-
One of these tubes goes
to the right lung and 1 goes to the left lung
-
In the lungs, these
tubes divide into smaller bronchi
-
Then into even smaller
tubes called bronchioles
-
Bronchioles end in tiny
air sacs called alveoli