Mucus is a substance produced by the lining of the nasal cavity. This mucus helps moisten and filter incoming air.
There are tiny hairs called Cilia which line the nasal cavity. These hairs help trap dust particles which are then expelled out the nose.
Our nostrils help us breathe air but have you ever wondered where does that air go? Well our air goes up our nostrils and then enters what we call a nasal cavity
There are a few key reasons why the air you breathe in needs to be warmed in the nasal cavity. It will shock your system and cause vessels to constrict if not warmed for example.
You can get viruses through contact and through the air. The cells of Mucous membrane, such as those lining the respiratory passages that we breathe through, are open to virus attacks because we breathe the air and we can't stop breathing or we die. We also don't know who might have it and we could walk by someone who sneezed/coughed and getinvectived.
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Mucus is a substance produced by the lining of the nasal cavity. This mucus helps moisten and filter incoming air.
Mucus is a substance produced by the lining of the nasal cavity. This mucus helps moisten and filter incoming air.
There are tiny hairs called Cilia which line the nasal cavity. These hairs help trap dust particles which are then expelled out the nose.
The nasal cavity
Mucus is a substance produced by the lining of the nasal cavity. This mucus helps moisten and filter incoming air.
Our nostrils help us breathe air but have you ever wondered where does that air go? Well our air goes up our nostrils and then enters what we call a nasal cavity
the nasal passage
There are a few key reasons why the air you breathe in needs to be warmed in the nasal cavity. It will shock your system and cause vessels to constrict if not warmed for example.
No, they breathe "Their own scent". This is what makes them Badass.
Nasal cavities act as a both a filter and a humidifier, filtering out much of the contaminants in the air that you breathe, and humidifying the air prior to the airs entrance into the lower respiratory tract (trachea, lungs).
It has small dense hairs lining it that trap small debris, thus filtering the air.