The medical term is dyspnea (difficulty breathing).
the diaphragm... ^_^
Your diaphragm contracts and expands when you breath. When the diaphragm contracts, air rushes into the lungs. When the diaphragm relaxes, air is exhaled.
The fundus of the stomach, located at the top portion, can push against the diaphragm when the stomach is full, causing discomfort and difficulty taking deep breaths. This can lead to symptoms such as shortness of breath, chest tightness, and difficulty breathing deeply. Practicing smaller, more frequent meals and avoiding lying down immediately after eating can help alleviate these symptoms.
Allows people to breath
That would be the diaphragm.
its when your diaphragm spazzums and you use your diaphragm to breath so if you stop breathing (hold your breath) you should be just fine (:
The key to this is practice practice and more practice. Work on breathing from the diaphragm, feeling the whole of your lungs filling with air with each breath and consciously rationing how much breath you allow out. Work on playing longer phrases over a series of weeks. The diaphragm is a muscle like any other, repeated exercise will help build strength and stamina.
When you breath, your diaphragm moves up and down , causing air to flow into and out of the lungs .
It will push out, if you are breathing from the diaphragm.
The diaphragm moves down and contracts, flattening itself, when you inhale.
The diaphragm ( the muscle underneath your lungs that help you breath) is a skeletal muscle, not smooth