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  2. Muscles of respiration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscles_of_respiration

    This compresses the abdominal cavity, raises the ribs upward and outward and thus expands the thoracic cavity. This expansion draws air into the lungs. When the diaphragm relaxes, elastic recoil of the lungs causes the thoracic cavity to contract, forcing air out of the lungs, and returning to its dome-shape. [1]

  3. Exhalation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhalation

    Exhalation (or expiration) is the flow of the breath out of an organism. In animals, it is the movement of air from the lungs out of the airways, to the external environment during breathing. This happens due to elastic properties of the lungs, as well as the internal intercostal muscles which lower

  4. Respiratory center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_center

    The in-breath is followed by the out-breath, giving the respiratory cycle of inhalation and exhalation. There are three phases of the respiratory cycle: inspiration, post-inspiration or passive expiration, and late or active expiration. [14] [15] The number of cycles per minute is the respiratory rate.

  5. Spirometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirometry

    Total lung capacity: the volume in the lungs at maximal inflation, the sum of VC and RV. TV: Tidal volume: that volume of air moved into or out of the lungs in 1 breath (TV indicates a subdivision of the lung; when tidal volume is precisely measured, as in gas exchange calculation, the symbol TV or V T is used.) RV

  6. Lung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lung

    The lungs are the primary organs of the respiratory system in many animals, ... The summed total of forced inspiration and expiration is a person's vital capacity.

  7. Respiratory system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_system

    The lungs expand and contract during the breathing cycle, drawing air in and out of the lungs. The volume of air moved in or out of the lungs under normal resting circumstances (the resting tidal volume of about 500 ml), and volumes moved during maximally forced inhalation and maximally forced exhalation are measured in humans by spirometry. [12]

  8. Hering–Breuer reflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hering–Breuer_reflex

    Increased sensory activity of the pulmonary-stretch lung afferents (via the vagus nerve) results in inhibition of the central inspiratory drive and thus inhibition of inspiration and initiation of expiration. The lung afferents also send inhibitory projections to the cardiac vagal motor neurones (CVM) in the nucleus ambiguus (NA) and dorsal ...

  9. Airway resistance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airway_resistance

    Airway resistance can also vary between inspiration and expiration: In emphysema there is destruction of the elastic tissue of the lungs which help hold the small airways open. Therefore, during expiration, particularly forced expiration, these airways may collapse causing increased airway resistance.