The right lung has 3 sections and the and the left has 2. That makes for One secondary Bronchi per section.
The right lung has three sections or lobes while the left lung is smaller and only has two lobes
The right lung contains three lobes. The left lobe only has two. Because of the heart on the left side, the left lung only has two lobes to make more room for the heart to pump on that side.
The left lung has only two lobes and the right has three.
Oh, dude, each lung has three lobes. The right lung has three lobes - upper, middle, and lower lobes, while the left lung only has two - upper and lower lobes. So, like, that's a total of six lobes between the two lungs. Cool, right?
The lungs have five lobes in total. The right lung has three lobes (upper, middle, lower), while the left lung has two lobes (upper and lower).
Sections of the lungs are called lobes. The right lung has 3 lobes and the left lung has two, which allows room for the heart.
The Right lung has 3 lobes (superior, inferior & middle) while the left lung has 2 lobes (superior & inferior).
PROBABLY BECAUSE THERE IS LESS ROOM ON THAT SIDE
The Right lung has 3 lobes (superior, inferior & middle) while the left lung has 2 lobes (superior & inferior).
The divisions of the lungs are called lobes. The right lung has three lobes (upper, middle, lower), while the left lung has two lobes (upper and lower).
Typically, the heart lies on the left side of the body (levocardia ), the liver and spleen lie on the right, and the lung on the left has two lobes while the lung on the right has three lobes. This normal arrangement is known as situs solitus.
It has two lobes compared to three on the right.