The cilia hairs are actually found in the trachea. Their job is to push up and out excess mucus. Mucus is excreted to trap foreign particles that enter our respiratory tract. Nicotine hardens the mucus and cilia therefore rendering them useless, so the the trachea eventually starts closing up with mucus causing the person to cough (in order to remove this excess mucus).
Your lungs are the reasons you body has Oxygen. In your lungs, we do produce mucus, which we cough up because of the cilia in our lungs. Smoking causes this cilia to not move the mucus out of your lungs which in turn causes problems.
After smoking, cilia cells in the lungs become damaged and may become paralyzed or stop functioning. This can lead to difficulty in clearing mucus and debris from the airways, increasing the risk of respiratory infections and other lung diseases. Quitting smoking can help restore cilia function over time.
Cilia
The cilia are the little hairs in your respiritory system that move the mucus up and out of your lungs. If you damage the cilia and produce more mucus, then you can't move mucus out of your lungs. If you quit smoking the cilia will heal completely after a few weeks.
Cilia are cells with tiny hairs like parts on them found in your trachea and lungs. They aid in the movement of mucous and dirt particles out of your lungs. They can also be permanently damaged by smoking resulting in the inability to effectively clean the lungs.
Cilia are tiny hair like fibers that are located in our broncial tubes. They keep stuff from going into your lungs that don't belong there more or less like a filter. By the way, smoking kills the cilia and allows harmful particles to enter the lungs causing what is referred to as smokers cough. If a young person quits smoking the cilia may grow again but for older smokers the chances are slim that the cilia will ever come back.
It causes tar buildup in the lungs. it destroys the cilia which help with cleaning the lungs. and it destroys the alveoli, which makes it hard to breath.
smoking causes tar to build up on the lungs, and the Cilia can't function properly.
Smoking damages the lungs in several ways. It damages the cilia which are hair like structures which move contaminants from the lungs, therefore allowing the contaminants to remain. Smoking also damages the alveoli in the lungs, which are small air sacs that help deliver oxygen into the bloodstream and assist in removing carbon dioxide when you exhale.
Cilia are hair like structures that brush away particles in your lungs. When you smoke dust, pollen and other particles get stuffed into them and sit there. If they are there for a long time they form tar.
It burns the cilia in your lungs. It kills them, basically. That means that you can't feel particulates coming into your lungs which could lead to bronchitis or something.
Cilia..they are finger-like things lining the pleural cavity of your lungs. And when you smoke, or get second-hand smoke or other pollutants in your lungs, you cough because the cilia are trying to push all the crap out. Smoking damages them..and can take years to grow back and function properly.