then you cough for a few minutes
The diaphragm goes down, pulling air into the lungs. Your ribs expand, helping your lungs to expand also.
Lungs form sputum, or matter that is coughed up, which may include saliva, mucus, or other materials, that is ejected from the mouth, and goes up the respiratory tract. It forms in your lungs, when you breath in bacteria, and other particles in the air. Your saliva gland may produce the saliva that you eject when coughing too.
I'm not a real smart person n all but i think it goes down a certain pipe down your throat, into your lungs and then out again
I'm not a real smart person n all but i think it goes down a certain pipe down your throat, into your lungs and then out again
when we breathe in your diaphragm goes down and the lungs expand and the air goes there. and im right. (:
It goes to the Atrium the the Ventrilcle and then the Lungs. Second time it goes to the Atrium, Ventricle and it leaves the Aorta to the whole body. Here is a helpful song: In Down and Out In Down and Out In through the A Down to the V and out to the Lungs In through the A Down to the V Ou to the whole body
when supply goes down the price goes up>
Your lungs
No. Food and liquids should not go down into the lungs. That is why one coughs excessively when food or liquid "goes down the wrong tube." Aspiration is the term for breathing food or liquid into the lungs, and frequently causes a severe pneumonitis and may result in pneumonia.
Your mum goes down
The oxygen goes into your lungs, then into your blood stream. Then carbon dioxide goes into your lungs and thats when you exhale. Oxygen changes to carbondioxide in your body.
Trachea goes from the mouth to the lungs. Esophagus goes from the mouth to the stomach.