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BRONCHIOLES AND ALVEOLI
The narrowest bronchioles end in 300 million air-filled bags called alveoli that fill most of the lungs and are surrounded by blood capillaries. Oxygen passes through the wall of each alveolus into the bloodstream in exchange for carbon dioxide, which moves in the opposite direction. The alveoli provide a large surface across which this exchange can take place efficiently.

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BRONCHIAL TREE
Once inside a lung, each bronchus divides into smaller bronchi that then spilt even further. These, in turn, divide repeatedly to form smaller branches called bronchioles. This arrangement is often called “the bronchial tree” because its structure looks like an upside-down tree with the trachea as the trunk, bronchi as branches, and bronchioles as twigs.

Branches of^71
the smallest bronchioles

reach the
deepest parts

of the lung
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TRACHEA
Also called the windpipe, this flexible tube carries air between the larynx (voice box)
at the base of the throat and the two
bronchi that arise at its lower end. Up
to 20 C-shaped rings of cartilage that
encircle the trachea hold it open when

you breathe in. Mucus lining the

trachea cleans the incoming air
by trapping dirt and germs, a process that began in the nasal cavity.

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DIAPHRAGM
Situated just below the lungs, the diaphragm plays a key role in breathing. When breathing in, the diaphragm contracts and flattens as muscles pull the ribs upwards and outwards. This increases the space in the chest so that air is sucked into the lungs. When breathing out the relaxed diaphragm is pushed upwards, and the ribs move downwards and inwards, squeezing air from the lungs.

The diaphragm is a domed sheet of muscle that separates chest from abdomen

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070_071_Respiration.indd 71 03/01/19 12:09 PM

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