There are three groups.
The diaphragm is probably the one you're asking about - it's the large "wall" of muscle between the lungs/heart in the thorax in the upper part of the body and the other, lower organs (stomach, intestines, etc) in the abdomen.
When you breath, and your belly moves in or out, you are using the diaphragm.
The lungs tissue will float
It is the tissue which surrounds and supports the actually functional lung tissue
Selenium is stored in the heart, kidney, lung, liver, pancreas and muscle tissue. Selenium is found in nuts, meat, mushrooms, fish and eggs.
In lungs there are several types of tissues, depending of what part of the lung you're referring to. It gets thinner and thinner from bronchi to alveoli, for example with just one layer of cells in these last ones.
no the lung is involuntary
Pathological lung sections differ from normal lung tissue. Pathological lung sections include the pathological tissues of fibronectin, collagens, and proteoglycans.
Oxygen (O2) is delivered via artery to capillary to muscle tissue where its used in metabolism resulting in CO2; then CO2 goes from muscle tissue to venous system to pulmonary(lung) system where CO2 is exchanged for O2, then returned to the heart for recirculation.
As you may already understand there are many different types of 'tissue' in the body so I hope these will act as a general selection. Heart Tissue Liver Tissue Lung Tissue Brain Tissue / Nerve Tissue Pancreatic Tissue Almost every organ has tissue which is used to bind the organs together acting as a secondary support for organs. I wonder who says that there are only five: bone, connective, neural, muscle, organ, blood vessels and probably more.
The stroma
From the windpipe, the air moves through two large passageways, called the bronchi. A complex system of much smaller tubes or bronchioles branch out from your bronchi to carry oxygen to the "working parts" of the lungs - the millions of air sacs or alveoli thanks :0
AST is found in the heart, liver, skeletal muscle, kidney, pancreas, spleen, lung, red blood cells, and brain tissue.
The diaphragm controls lung movement. The rib cage also contributes to this.