Explain the anatomy and physiology of breathing. Include an explanation of what happens during the inbreath and outbreath stages of breathing
When the diaphragm contracts, it tightens and draws downward because it is anchored all along the rim of the rib cage. This downward movement increases the volume of the chest cavity, in which the lungs are located on either side of the heart. The increased volume in the chest produces a decrease in the air pressure in the lungs. Because of the decreased pressure inside the lungs, air from outside the body, which is at a higher pressure, flows into the lungs to equalize the pressure. This is the inbreath. After the diaphragm contracts, it goes through a relaxation. As the diaphragm muscle relaxes, it gets looser and returns to its original position higher up in the chest, thereby decreasing the volume of the chest cavity. This increases the pressure in the chest, which forces the air in the lungs out through the nose (and mouth if it is open). This is the outbreath. So in all breathing, the air is drawn into the lungs as the diaphragm contracts and lowers, and it is expelled as the diaphragm relaxes and comes back up.
You might also like to view...
hemodialysis : Procedure that pushes a patient’s blood through permeable membranes within an instrument to artificially ___________ nitrogenous wastes and excess ions that accumulate during normal body metabolism
Fill in the missing word in the definition for the key term.
Lesions within the gustatory cortex or VPM thalamus can cause __________
Fill in the blank with correct word
A cut perpendicular across the arms yields a cross-section view
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
In which trimester does the mother produce colostrum?
A) first B) second C) third D) All of the answers are correct.