Not sure what exactly you are looking for here... but starting from the mouth:
Pharynx
Trachea
Bronchi
Bronchioles
Alveoli
The small air tubes that lead to the alveoli are called bronchioles. They branch off from the bronchi and continue to subdivide into smaller tubes within the lungs, eventually ending in the alveoli where gas exchange occurs.
After passing through the larynx, air moves through the trachea, which then branches into the bronchial tubes. The bronchial tubes further branch into smaller airways called bronchioles, which ultimately lead to the alveoli where gas exchange occurs in the lungs.
Trachea branches to the mainstem bronchus branches to the lobar bronchi branches to the segmental bronchi to the bronchioles branches to the terminal bronchioles branches to the respiratory bronchioles branches to the the alveolar ducts finally lead to the alveoli.Or... Trachea to Bronchus (Bronchi) to the bronchioles to the alveolar ducts to the alveoli.
trachea- primary bronchi- secondary bronchi- tertiary bronchi- bronchiole- alveoli
The main air tube in your throat is called the trachea. You can feel its ridges of cartilage along the front of your neck. The trachea has two branches called bronchi which are also strengthened by cartilage. They lead to the lungs. The next smaller branches are called bronchioles; they are soft without cartilage since they are inside the lungs. The bronchioles lead to the alveoli where the work of the lungs takes place.
The bronchi branch into smaller tubes called bronchioles, which then lead to clusters of air sacs called alveoli. The alveoli are the site where oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange occurs during the process of respiration.
The trachea or windpipe divides into the two primary bronchi which enter each lung. These further divide and subdivide into smaller and smaller bronchi finally forming tiny tubes called bronchioles that end in alveoli (air sacs that facilitate oxygen transfer from the lungs into the pulmonary capillaries).
The lungs contain alveoli, bronchioles, and bronchi. Alveoli are tiny air sacs where oxygen is exchanged for carbon dioxide in the blood. Bronchioles are small airways that branch from bronchi, which are larger airways that lead to the lungs.
The large tubes in the respiratory system are called bronchi. The trachea branches into two primary bronchi, which then divide into smaller bronchioles that lead to the lungs. These tubes are essential for conducting air to and from the lungs during the process of respiration.
Yes, bronchial tubes are larger in diameter compared to bronchioles. Bronchial tubes are the main airways in the respiratory system that branch off into bronchioles, which are smaller airways that lead to the alveoli in the lungs where gas exchange occurs.
After air passes through the larynx, it enters your windpipe, or trachea. The trachea cleans the air again and channels it into the lungs through two large tubes called bronchi. The bronchi divide into smaller tubes and eventually lead to air sacs called alveoli. It is in the alveoli that oxygen moves into your blood and carbon dioxide moves out.
Bronchial tubes