Children's Hospital of Wisconsin logo   spacing image
About Children's Hospital and Health Systemspacing image
Quick Links for:
spacing imageHealth Care Professionalsspacing image
    Search:
                          
Horizontal stripes
spacing imageHealth InformationPrograms & ClinicsFind a DoctorMaps & DirectionsGiving & VolunteeringNews & CalendarResearchAdvocacy & CommunityQualityCareersspacing image

  Choose a Condition or Topic
 
 
Side navigation, highlighted area, top left Side navigation, highlighted area, top center Side navigation, highlighted area, top right
  Disorders, Diseases and Organ Topics
 
Side navigation, highlighted area, bottom left Side navigation, highlighted area, bottom center Side navigation, highlighted area, bottom right
 
  Programs & Clinics
 
  Request an appointment
 
  Patient Handouts/ Teaching Sheets
 
  Transition to Adult Care
 
  Treating Common Childhood Ailments
 
  Health & Safety Tips
 
  Online Library
 
  CaringBridge Patient Web Sites
 
spacing image
spacing image spacing image E-mail this page E-mail this page     Print this page Print this page
spacing image spacing image

The Lungs in Pregnancy
See also ...

Components of the Respiratory SystemWhat makes up the respiratory system?
The respiratory system is made up of the organs involved in the interchanges of gases, and consists of the following:
  • nose
  • pharynx
  • larynx
  • trachea
  • bronchi
  • lungs

What is the function of the lungs?
The lungs take in oxygen, which cells need to live and carry out their normal functions. The lungs also get rid of carbon dioxide, a waste product of the body's cells.

The lungs are a pair of cone-shaped organs made up of spongy, pinkish-gray tissue. They take up most of the space in the chest, or the thorax (the part of the body between the base of the neck and diaphragm). The lungs are enveloped in a membrane called the pleura.

The right lung has three sections, called lobes. The left lung has two lobes. When you breathe, the air:

  • enters the body through the nose or the mouth.

  • travels down the throat through the larynx (voice box) and trachea (windpipe).

  • goes into the lungs through tubes called main-stem bronchi.

    • one main-stem bronchus leads to the right lung and one to the left lung.

    • in the lungs, the main-stem bronchi divide into smaller bronchi. 

    • and then into even smaller tubes called bronchioles. 

    • bronchioles end in tiny air sacs called alveoli.


The respiratory system in pregnancy:
Many changes occur in the respiratory system during pregnancy. Hormones and physical changes due to the growing fetus can affect the upper and lower respiratory tracts. Some of the common changes that occur in the respiratory system with pregnancy include the following:

  • stuffy or runny nose and nosebleeds.
  • enlargement of the rib cage.
  • upward movement of the diaphragm, the large flat muscle used for respiration, located just below the lungs.
  • increase in the amount of air breathed in and out.
  • reduced lung capacity.
  • increased oxygen use.

Because of these changes, many women feel short of breath or have some difficulty breathing as pregnancy progresses. When lung diseases develop or there is a pre-existing condition such as asthma, the lungs may have difficulty compensating.

Click here to view related Web sites

Return to the High-Risk Pregnancy Home Page
Return to the Disorders, Diseases and Organ Topics Home Page

spacing image Arrow Back to top
spacing image page footer spacing image
spacing image
spacing image