MICROANATOMY

ENDOCRINE ORGANS AND RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
Place where air enters the body; warms, moistens, and filters incoming air.
A
lungs
B
mouth
C
bronchioles
D
nasal cavity/nose
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -In the nostrils, air gets warmed and moistened. Tiny hairs in the nose called cilia (SIL-ee-uh) filter out dust and other particles.

Detailed explanation-2: -The tissue that lines the nasal cavity, called the nasal epithelium, moistens, warms, and further cleanses the inhaled air. Nasal turbinates, or nasal conchae, are fingerlike projections inside the nasal cavity that increase the surface area for warming and moistening inhaled air.

Detailed explanation-3: -Hairlike structures called cilia line the mucous membrane and move the particles trapped in the mucus out of the nose. Inhaled air is moistened, warmed, and cleansed by the tissue that lines the nasal cavity.

Detailed explanation-4: -The nasal cavity lies above the bone that forms the roof of the mouth and curves down at the back to join the throat. It is divided into two sections called nasal passages. Air moves through these passages during breathing. The nasal passages filter and warm the air, and make it moist before it goes into the lungs.

Detailed explanation-5: -Scroll-shaped bones, the nasal conchae, protrude and form spaces through which the air passes. The conchae swirl the air around to allow the air time to humidify, warm, and be cleaned before it enters the lungs.

There is 1 question to complete.