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Lung volumes refer to physical differences in lung volume, while lung capacities represent different combinations of lung volumes, usually in relation to inhalation and exhalation. The average lung of human lungs can hold about 6 litres of air, but only a small amount of this capacity is used during normal breathing. Breathing mechanism in mammals is called "tidal breathing". Tidal breathing means that air goes into the lungs the same way that it comes out. An average human breathes some 9-20 times per minute.
[edit] Factors affecting volumesSeveral factors affect lung volumes; some can be controlled and some cannot. Lung volumes can be measured using the following terms:
A person who is born and lives at sea level will develop a slightly smaller lung capacity than a person who spends their life at a high altitude. This is because the atmosphere is less dense at higher altitude, and therefore, the same volume of air contains fewer molecules of all gases, including oxygen. In response to higher altitude, the body's diffusing capacity increases in order to be able to process more air. When someone living at or near sea level travels to locations at high altitudes (eg. the Andes, Denver, Colorado, Tibet, the Himalayas, etc.) s/he can develop a condition called altitude sickness because their lungs remove adequate amounts of carbon dioxide but they do not take in enough oxygen. (In normal individuals, carbon dioxide is the primary determinant of respiratory drive.) [edit] ValuesThese values vary with the age and height of the person. For males, the values that follow are for a 70 kg (154 lb), average-sized adult male [1]; for females, the editors of this article have not yet produced data from primary sources; until they do, the data listed are estimates obtained by reducing the values for males by 22.5% [2]:
The tidal volume, vital capacity, inspiratory capacity and expiratory reserve volume can be measured directly with a spirometer. Determination of the residual volume can be done by radiographic planemetry, body plethysmography, closed circuit dilution and nitrogen washout. These are the basic elements of a ventilatory pulmonary function test. [edit] Restrictive and obstructiveThe results (in particular FEV1/FVC and FRC) can be used to distinguish between restrictive and obstructive pulmonary diseases:
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