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Your diaphragm
It's called the uterus, this is also where the baby grows at, this is why it expands since when the baby grows it needs more room.
1st of all, the question should be "what organ(s) do you breathe with" because it's a...group effort, so to speak :) A basic answer would be that the lungs help you breathe but that's not the whole picture. In a slightly more intricate answer, the brain controls the lungs, "telling" them to inhale and exhale, and the heart keeps the blood moving so that your brain can continue controlling the lungs.
It is the bladder.
The nose is the sense organ that has olfactory cells responsible for detecting an odor. These cells are located in the nasal cavity and respond to the molecules in the air that we inhale.
Your diaphragm
The diaphragm expands and contracts automatically, forcing air into and out of the lungs.
The diaphragm (pronounced - diafram).
heart
muscles
muscles
Smooth muscles
Whenever you inhale and exhale, Oxygen gets supplied into and out of your lungs to power you everyday and keep you going. We get Oxygen which gets supplied into your blood which is essential to keep you alive. Lungs are part pulmonary system, which is the essential respiration organ.
It's called the uterus, this is also where the baby grows at, this is why it expands since when the baby grows it needs more room.
Typically that organ is your heart. It contracts and relaxes 72 times per minute, day and night, till your death. That means for hundred years.
1st of all, the question should be "what organ(s) do you breathe with" because it's a...group effort, so to speak :) A basic answer would be that the lungs help you breathe but that's not the whole picture. In a slightly more intricate answer, the brain controls the lungs, "telling" them to inhale and exhale, and the heart keeps the blood moving so that your brain can continue controlling the lungs.
"When smooth muscle contracts, the cavity of an organ alternately becomes smaller or enlarges so that substances are propelled through the organ along a specific pathway"Smooth muscle