[HTML][HTML] How well designed is the human lung?

JB West - American journal of respiratory and critical care …, 2006 - atsjournals.org
JB West
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2006atsjournals.org
Although it is often stated that the structure of the human lung is ideally suited to its gas
exchange function, the lung is very vulnerable under some abnormal conditions. One
example is the postoperative period in a patient with an otherwise normal lung where
retained secretions can rapidly cause unventilated areas or atelectasis and substantial
impairment of gas exchange. Some pulmonologists may be surprised to learn that evolution
has provided a very different, and arguably superior, lung design in the bird. Here, the gas …
Although it is often stated that the structure of the human lung is ideally suited to its gas exchange function, the lung is very vulnerable under some abnormal conditions. One example is the postoperative period in a patient with an otherwise normal lung where retained secretions can rapidly cause unventilated areas or atelectasis and substantial impairment of gas exchange. Some pulmonologists may be surprised to learn that evolution has provided a very different, and arguably superior, lung design in the bird. Here, the gas exchange and ventilatory functions of the lung are separated. Gas exchange occurs in relatively rigid parabronchi, which are more robust than the delicate alveoli in the human lung, and ventilation is performed by highly expandable air sacs. A comparison of these two completely divergent evolutionary paths throws light on some of the problems of the human lung.
Suppose you were asked to design* a heat exchanger, such as the radiator of a car. The purpose of this is to enable heat from the engine to be eliminated to the outside air. One way would be to pump the hot coolant fluid from the engine through a grid of many small tubes and have air passed across these by means of a fan. In fact, this is the time-honored design for car radiators. If you suggested this, Henry Ford would have been proud of you.
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