The lungs operate independently , and you can live with one lung.
Sudden, sharp chest pain is the main symptom of pneumothorax or a collapsed lung. This can happen on either the right or left side of your chest and is usually the result of injury. It may also result from lung disease, ruptured air blisters, or ventilator use.
Left pneumothorax, right pleural adhesions and rarely right-sided cardiomyopathy (ARVC)
Thoracic (chest) cavity is confined by the rib cage. Within there is the right and left pleural cavities (lungs) and the mediastium or pericardial cavity (heart). If something destroys the confinement of this area (blunt or sharp forced trauma) the result may be a pneumothorax or collapsed lung(s).
Seek professional medical advise as soon as possible
The spare tire on a tacoma sometimes has a sensor in it, too.
No one is always right. A person who believes they are always right simply thinks they "are above" everyone else. They have inflated ego's, and are hard to be around. But underneath it all, they are truly sniveling cowards who don't have much for self-esteem. They bully people to appear together and knowledgeable. They are typically narrow minded people, not willing to look outside the box, or consider others perspectives. They are insecure inside, self righteous on the outside.So, in other words...the person writing this obviously thinks that he/she is ALWAYS right.
collapsed lifter?
The government made poor decisions.
It's when you press the [-] button in the top right corner (or the top left for Macs I believe) and the window "collapses" to the toolbar.
As far as i know yes they are. They are similar to bagpipes but insted of blowing to keep the bag inflated a small bellows pumped with the right arm.
Possibly the problem is tire pressure. If the right front tire is under inflated it will grip the road more and pull you right when you brake.
no. the common parallelogram that looks like a slightly collapsed square/rectangle has angles around 45 degrees.