lung

     

The lung is the essential respiration organ in air-breathing animals, incluing most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. The most primitive animals with a lung are the lungfish (vertebrate) and the pulmonate snails (invertebrate). In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart. Their principal function is to transport oxygen from the atmosphere into the bloodstream, and to release carbon dioxide from the bloodstream into the atmosphere. This exchange of gases is accomplished in the mosaic of specialized cells that form millions of tiny, exceptionally thin-walled air sacs called alveoli.

Trivia about lung

  • Snakes have a peculiar respiratory system; most of them have only one of these
  • We wonder if James Hardy held his breath as he performed the first transplant of one of these on a human in 1963
  • Each bronchus in the body leads to 1 of these organs, filled with millions of alveoli; how did I nick one during an eye exam?
  • This organ was first successfully transplanted in 1981, as a package deal with a heart
  • Pulmo-