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Human Lung Information

The human lungs are the organs of respiration in humans. Humans have two lungs. Together, the lungs contain approximately 2,400 kilometres (1,500 mi) of airways and 300 to 500 million alveoli, having a total surface area of about 70 square metres (750 sq ft) (8,4 x 8,4 m) in adults — roughly the same area as one side of a tennis court.[1] Furthermore, if all of the capillaries that surround the alveoli were unwound and laid end to end, they would extend for about 992 kilometres (616 mi). Each lung weighs 1.1 kilograms (2.4 lb), therefore making the entire organ about 2.3 kilograms (5.1 lb).

Human lungs

The conducting zone contains the trachea, the bronchi, the bronchioles, and the terminal bronchioles The respiratory zone contains the respiratory bronchioles, the alveolar ducts, and the alveoli. The conducting zone and the respiratory stuffers (but not the alveoli) are made up of airways. The conducting zone has no gas exchange with the blood, and is reinforced with cartilage in order to hold open the airways. The conducting zone warms the air to 37 °C (99 °F) and humidifies the air. It also cleanses the air by removing particles via cilia located on the walls of all the passageways. The lungs are surrounded by the rib cage. The respiratory zone is the site of gas exchange with blood.

The pleural cavity is the potential space between the parietal pleura, lining the inner wall of the thoracic cage, and the visceral pleura lining the lungs.

The lung parenchyma is strictly used to refer solely to alveolar tissue with respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts and terminal bronchioles.[2] However, it often includes any form of lung tissue, also including bronchioles, bronchi, blood vessels and lung interstitium.[2]

Modification of substances

The lungs convert angiotensin I to angiotensin II. In addition, they remove several blood-borne substances, e.g. PGE1, PGE2, PGF, leukotrienes, serotonin, bradykinin.[3]

References

  1. ^ Notter, Robert H. (2000). Lung surfactants: basic science and clinical applications. New York, N.Y: Marcel Dekker. pp. 120. ISBN 0-8247-0401-0. http://books.google.com/books?id=pAuiWvNHwZcC&pg=PA120&lpg=PA120&dq=area+tennis+court+alveoli. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
  2. ^ a b medilexicon.com > Medical Dictionary - 'Parenchyma Of Lung' In turn citing: Stedman's Medical Dictionary. 2006
  3. ^ Walter F., PhD. Boron (2004). Medical Physiology: A Cellular And Molecular Approaoch. Elsevier/Saunders. ISBN 1-4160-2328-3. Page 605

Additional images

Human systems and organs
TA 2–4: MS
Skeletal system Bone (Carpus · Collar bone (clavicle) · Thigh bone (femur) · Fibula · Humerus · Mandible · Metacarpus · Metatarsus · Ossicles · Patella · Phalanges · Radius · Skull (cranium) · Tarsus · Tibia · Ulna · Rib · Vertebra · Pelvis · Sternum) · Cartilage
Joints Fibrous joint · Cartilaginous joint · Synovial joint
Muscular system Muscle · Tendon · Diaphragm
TA 5–11: splanchnic/ viscus
mostly Thoracic
Respiratory system URT (Nose, Nasopharynx, Larynx) · LRT (Trachea, Bronchus, Lung)
mostly Abdominopelvic
Digestive system+ adnexa Mouth (Salivary gland, Tongue) · upper GI (Oropharynx, Laryngopharynx, Esophagus, Stomach) · lower GI (Small intestine, Appendix, Colon, Rectum, Anus) · accessory (Liver, Biliary tract, Pancreas)
GU: Urinary system Kidney · Ureter · Bladder · Urethra
GU: Reproductive system Female (Uterus, Vulva, Ovary, Placenta) · Male (Scrotum, Penis, Prostate, Testicle, Seminal vesicle)
Endocrine system Pituitary · Pineal · Thyroid · Parathyroid · Adrenal · Islets of Langerhans
TA 12–16
Circulatory system
Cardiovascular system peripheral (Artery, Vein, Lymphatic vessel) · Heart
Lymphatic system primary (Bone marrow, Thymus) · secondary (Spleen, Lymph node)
Nervous system (Brain, Spinal cord, Nerve) · Sensory system (Ear, Eye)
Integumentary system Skin · Subcutaneous tissue · Breast (Mammary gland)
Blood (Non-TA)
Myeloid Myeloid immune system
Lymphoid Lymphoid immune system
General anatomy: , , , ,
Anatomy: Lower RT respiratory system (TA A06.3–5, TH H3.05.02, GA 11.1084)
TB tree
Trachea Tracheal rings · Annular ligaments of trachea · Carina
Bronchus main bronchus (right, left) · lobar/secondary bronchi (eparterial bronchus) · segmental/tertiary bronchi
Lungs
General

Left lung/Right lung · Base/Apex · Root/Hilum

Superior lobe · Lingula of left lung/Middle lobe of right lung · Inferior lobe

borders: Anterior border (Cardiac notch) · Posterior border · Inferior border

surfaces: Costal surface · Mediastinal surface (Cardiac impression) · Diaphragmatic surface

fissures: Oblique fissure · Horizontal fissure
BP segment Bronchiole: Conducting zone (Terminal bronchiole) · Respiratory zone (Respiratory bronchiole · Alveolar duct · Alveolus · Blood-air barrier)
Cells Pneumocyte (Type I pneumocyte, Type II pneumocyte) · Clara cell · Goblet cell

: RES

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Respiratory system, physiology: respiratory physiology
Lung volumes

VC · FRC · Vt · dead space · CC · PEF

calculations: respiratory minute volume · FEV1/FVC ratio

methods of lung testing: spirometry · body plethysmography · peak flow meter · nitrogen washout
Airways/ ventilation (V) positive pressure ventilation · breath (inhalation, exhalation) · respiratory rate · respirometer · pulmonary surfactant · compliance · elastic recoil · hysteresivity · airway resistance · bronchial hyperresponsiveness · bronchoconstriction/bronchodilation
Blood/ perfusion (Q) pulmonary circulation · hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction · pulmonary shunt
Interactions/ ventilation/perfusion ratio (V/Q) ventilation/perfusion scan · zones of the lung · gas exchange · pulmonary gas pressures · alveolar gas equation · alveolar-arterial gradient · hemoglobin · oxygen-haemoglobin dissociation curve (Oxygen saturation, 2,3-DPG, Bohr effect, Haldane effect) · carbonic anhydrase (chloride shift) · oxyhemoglobin · respiratory quotient · arterial blood gas · diffusion capacity (DLCO)
Control of respiration pons (pneumotaxic center, apneustic center) · medulla (dorsal respiratory group, ventral respiratory group) · chemoreceptors (central, peripheral) · pulmonary stretch receptors (Hering-Breuer reflex)
Insufficiency high altitude · oxygen toxicity · hypoxia

: RES

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