Rings of cartilage
The bronchial tree includes the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles. Pimary Bronchi, Secondary Bronchi, Tertiary Bronchi, and Smaller Bronchi.
nasal passage, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi and bronchioles
Bronchidius is a respiratory infection that takes place in the bronchi. The bronchi are two tubes that extend from the trachea, or windpipe. This infection makes you have a sore throat and a bad cough.
it damages the bronchitis tubes narrowing them which makes it hard for you to breath
Absolutly nothing. Air TRAVELS to your lungs. Nothing makes it go to your lungs.
The diapragm is most important to the respiratory process. Your diaphragm pulls down when you inhale, opening your lungs up and letting air in. Your trachea is what brings athe air from your nose to your lungs. Nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs, and diapragm are all involved.
The respiratory system consists of your lungs, trachea, and oral/nasal passage. There are 2 lobes of lung tissue in your left lung and 3 lobes in the right. The bronchi are upper airway and the trachea is the a cartilaginous tube that connects the nasal and oral airway leading to your bronchi and lungs. The epiglottis is a muscular valve that allows for breathing or swallowing. When you swallow, it opens and closes to allow food to pass into your esophagus and bypass the airway.
Air travels to and from the lungs though two branches of the trachea called bronchi (one branch equals bronchus; 2 is bronchi). The bronchi subdivide within the lobes of the lungs into smaller and smaller air vessels called bronchioles or bronchioli (singular), that terminate in alveoli. When the alveoli inflate with inhaled air brought in through the bronchi, oxygen enters into the blood. When air is exhaled through the bronchi, the alveoli deflate to expel carbon dioxide and other waste gases from the blood.
the 18th tissue and the 65909867th tissue
It is important that food not go down the trachea, or expand the esophagus into the trachea or larynx. The epiglottis blocks the trachea when swallowing, and the change in shape makes this more effective.
yes because it makes from tissue.
What happens when a bolus gets stuck in the trachea is that it makes breathing difficult. If the food is not removed from the trachea, the person could die.