TAKE A BREATH
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THE ROUTE IN
When you breathe in, air first travels
down your pharynx (throat), then your
larynx (voice box), before entering your
trachea (windpipe) to get to your lungs.
About 20 C-shaped rings of cartilage
hold the trachea open.
Nasal cavity
Making sounds, too
Breathing is also connected
with making sounds. Two
membranes, the vocal cords,
stretch across the larynx. When
you breathe out, air passes over
the vocal cords, making them
vibrate. Your lips and tongue
shape these sounds into speech.
The larynx links
the throat to the
trachea.
Interior of left lung showing
the branching arteries (red),
veins (blue), and airways
(bronchi, shown in gray).
CILIA The trachea is lined
with millions of microhairs.
These are called cilia and they
beat with a wavelike motion
to propel mucus, microbes,
and dust up the trachea to be
coughed up.
The trachea
branches into two
tubes, or bronchi,
one for each lung.
We take a breath some 23,000 times
each day. Each breath results in a
constant flow of oxygen to the cells.
You cannot survive for long
without this supply.
The diaphragm separates the
chest cavity from the abdomen.
7
/^7
THE HUMAN BODY
Muscles between the
ribs help to move
them up and out
as you breathe in.
Pharynx
The epiglottis moves over
the entrance to the larynx
when swallowing.
Heart