How the Lungs Work
The air that you breathe in through your nose or
mouth travels down through your windpipe (trachea) into two tubes in your lungs
called the bronchial tubes, or airways.
The airways are shaped like an upside-down tree with
many branches. The trachea is the trunk. It splits into two bronchial tubes, or
bronchi. Thinner tubes called bronchioles branch out from the bronchi.
The bronchioles end in tiny air sacs called alveoli.
These air sacs have very thin walls, and small blood vessels called capillaries
run through them. There are about 300 million alveoli in a normal lung.
Scientists say that if the air sacs were opened up and placed next to one
another, they would cover a tennis court.
When the air that you've just breathed in reaches
these air sacs, the oxygen in the air passes through the air sac walls into the
blood in the capillaries. The blood then flows into larger veins, which carry
it to the heart. Your heart then pumps the oxygen-rich blood to all your body's
organs. These organs can't function without an ongoing supply of oxygen.
In idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, scarring begins in
the air sac walls and the spaces around them. It makes the walls of the air
sacs thicker. As a result, oxygen can't move from the air sacs into the
bloodstream. |