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What is your diaghragm for?

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Anonymous

14y ago
Updated: 8/19/2019

The diaphragm is muscular, curved wall that is located beneath the lung area and above the abdomen. In other words it is the thing that holds up the lungs and separates the area around the lung from your stomach and such things in the abdomen.

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Wiki User

14y ago

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Can holding a sneeze in tear your diaghragm?

Holding in a sneeze is unlikely to tear the diaphragm, but it can cause other issues such as increased pressure in the chest and potential damage to the throat or ears. The diaphragm is a strong muscle, and while it can be strained, a tear is rare. However, it's generally advisable to let sneezes occur naturally to avoid complications.


How does the diaghragm work?

The diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle located beneath the lungs that contracts and relaxes to help with breathing. Contraction of the diaphragm flattens its shape, which increases the space in the chest cavity and allows the lungs to expand and fill with air. Relaxation of the diaphragm causes it to return to its dome shape, which decreases the space in the chest cavity and helps push air out of the lungs.


When carbon dioxide builds up in your body senses this and sends a message to your diaghragm and rib muscles telling thm to breath?

When carbon dioxide accumulates in the body, it can lead to an increase in acidity, which stimulates chemoreceptors in the brain to signal the diaphragm and other respiratory muscles to increase breathing rate and depth. This response helps to remove excess carbon dioxide from the body and restore its acid-base balance.


What is the diaghragm and what does it do?

The diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle located at the base of the thoracic cavity, separating the chest from the abdomen. It plays a crucial role in respiration by contracting and flattening during inhalation, which increases the volume of the thoracic cavity and allows air to flow into the lungs. When it relaxes during exhalation, the diaphragm returns to its original shape, helping to expel air from the lungs. Additionally, it assists in increasing intra-abdominal pressure, which is important for various bodily functions.


How does one use his or her false vocal cords for screaming?

First you need to know if your cut out for screaming. If you smoke, stop otherwise screaming will never be easy and can be quite painful. Next, do you sing? Sometimes screaming can take away from you singing abilities, although that has never been proved. Last, do you have breathing or respiratory problems like asthma? Screaming takes a lot of air when your in your first year or so of practice, meaning your breathing heavy after songs.If your okay to be screaming, heres how you do it.You start, every single time when your learning, by warming up. Anything will do, just get your throat ready. Find the warmup that suits you, I would recommend pressing the keys of a piano in one octave, c to b flat, and go up and down twice without going into falsetto (the voice you would use to do a mario impression).Then you need water, which can be any temperture but preferably lukewarm just because cold or chilled water can constrict your vocal chords which is okay when your good at screaming but can be painful when your learning.Then, and you have probably heard this millions of times if you looked at youtube tutorials, you breathe in through, not into your diaghragm. Ait goes to your lungs. Always has, always will. By diaghragmatic breathing I mean breathing in so that your stomach pushes out. A lot of people say that when they do that their stomach goes inwards. If that happens then either your doing it wrong or something is medically out of place. Figure out which.Once you've done that, learn how to push the air out using your diaghragm. I cant help you with this, its something you have to just work out for yourself.Then once your doind that, go for it. Try to achieve a rough sound. Note, if its painful your doing it wrong, although sometimes pain can just be because your learning. If after a week of practice pain is still there, try experiminting with your method a bit and find a way of making it painless. And really thats it. Dont expect to get it immediately, like I can do stuff like this naturally, yet some people cant do it at all however long they practice. Just dont force yourself.