No. It is an organ, which is part of an organism.
No, a lung is not a living organism; it is an organ that is part of a living organism, such as a human or animal. Organs like the lung perform specific functions essential for survival, such as gas exchange. However, they cannot live independently outside of the organism.
fish
It targets the lungs.
The type of organ that undergoes mitosis the most is the lung. Not "lungs." Just lung. The right one in fact. The left lung acts a screen for the right lung, catching any stray particles. In fact, did you know, that your left lung is 1/7 the size of your right lung? Well, it's true.
Lung cancer decreases the organism's ability to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide, which can result in exercise intolerance, fatigue and a general lack of ability to move around effectively. It may also cause chest or rib pain. Eventually, the cancer will spread enough that the organism will die of it or a complication of the cancer.
Lung cancer decreases the organism's ability to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide, which can result in exercise intolerance, fatigue and a general lack of ability to move around effectively. It may also cause chest or rib pain. Eventually, the cancer will spread enough that the organism will die of it or a complication of the cancer.
American Cancer Society American Lung Association
Cell combines to form an Organ and Organs comprise the Organ System which makes up an ORGANISM. A lung is comprised of MORE than ONE CELL that does complex functions. A lung is not a cell alone, it is composed of more than one cell. Our lungs is an organ that is composed with cells, we cannot directly say that a lung is a cell. :-)
An example would be lung cancer. An infectious disease is caused by a parasitical organism.
Lung cancer decreases the organism's ability to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide, which can result in exercise intolerance, fatigue and a general lack of ability to move around effectively. It may also cause chest or rib pain. Eventually, the cancer will spread enough that the organism will die of it or a complication of the cancer.
Lung cancer decreases the organism's ability to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide, which can result in exercise intolerance, fatigue and a general lack of ability to move around effectively. It may also cause chest or rib pain. Eventually, the cancer will spread enough that the organism will die of it or a complication of the cancer.
Lung cancer decreases the organism's ability to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide, which can result in exercise intolerance, fatigue and a general lack of ability to move around effectively. It may also cause chest or rib pain. Eventually, the cancer will spread enough that the organism will die of it or a complication of the cancer.