Saturday, September 23, 2006

What's something that you do all day, every day, no matter where you are or who you're with?
(a) think about what's for lunch tomorrow
(b) put your finger in your nose
(c) hum your favorite song
(d) breathe
It's possible that some kids could say (a) or (c) or that others might even say - yikes! - (b). But every single person in the world has to say (d). Breathing air is necessary for keeping humans (and many animals) alive. And the two parts that are large and in charge when it comes to breathing? If you guessed your lungs, you're right!
Your lungs make up one of the largest organs in your body, and they work with your respiratory system to allow you to take in fresh air, get rid of stale air, and even talk. Let's take a tour of the lungs!

Locate Those Lungs
Your lungs are in your chest, and they are so large that they take up most of the space in there. You have two lungs, but they aren't the same size the way your eyes or nostrils are. Instead, the lung on the left side of your body is a bit smaller than the lung on the right. This extra space on the left leaves room for your heart.
Your lungs are protected by your rib cage, which is made up of 12 sets of ribs. These ribs are connected to your spine in your back and go around your lungs to keep them safe. Beneath the lungs is the diaphragm (say: dye-uh-fram), a dome-shaped muscle that works with your lungs to allow you to inhale (breathe in) and exhale (breathe out) air.

You can't see your lungs, but it's easy to feel them in action: put your hands on your chest and breathe in very deeply. You will feel your chest getting slightly bigger. Now breathe out the air, and feel your chest return to its regular size. You've just felt the power of your lungs!


A Look Inside the Lungs
From the outside, lungs are pink and a bit squishy, like a sponge. But the inside contains the real lowdown on the lungs! At the bottom of the trachea (say: tray-kee-uh), or windpipe, there are two large tubes. These tubes are called the main stem bronchi (say: bron-keye), and one heads left into the left lung, while the other heads right into the right lung. Each main stem bronchus (say: bron-kuss) - the name for just one of the bronchi - then branches off into tubes, or bronchi, that get smaller and even smaller still, like branches on a big tree. The tiniest tubes are called bronchioles (say: bron-kee-oles), and there are about 30,000 of them in each lung. Each bronchiole is about the same thickness as a hair.
At the end of each bronchiole is a special area that leads into clumps of teeny tiny air sacs called alveoli (say: al-vee-oh-lie). There are about 600 million alveoli in your lungs and if you stretched them out, they would cover an entire tennis court. Now that's a load of alveoli! Each alveolus (say: al-vee-oh-luss) - the name for one of the alveoli - has a mesh-like covering of very small blood vessels called capillaries (say: cap-ill-er-ees). These capillaries are so tiny that the cells in your blood need to line up single file just to march through them.

All About Inhaling
When you're walking your dog, cleaning your room, or spiking a volleyball, you probably don't think about inhaling (breathing in) - you've got other things on your mind! But every time you inhale air, dozens of body parts work together to help get that air in there without you ever thinking about it.

As you breathe in, your diaphragm contracts and flattens out. This allows it to move down, so your lungs have more room to grow larger as they fill up with air. "Move over, diaphragm, I'm filling up!" is what your lungs would say. And the diaphragm isn't the only part that gives your lungs the room they need. Your rib muscles also lift the ribs up and outward to give the lungs more space.

At the same time, you inhale air through your mouth and nose, and the air heads down your trachea, or windpipe. On the way down the windpipe, tiny hairs called cilia (say: sill-ee-uh) move gently to keep mucus and dirt out of the lungs. The air then goes through the series of branches in your lungs, through the bronchi and the bronchioles. The air finally ends up in the 600 million alveoli. As these millions of alveoli fill up with air, the lungs get bigger. Remember that experiment where you felt your lungs get larger? Well, you were really feeling the power of those awesome alveoli!

It's the alveoli that allow oxygen from the air to pass into your blood. All the cells in the body need oxygen every minute of the day. Oxygen passes through the walls of each alveolus into the tiny capillaries that surround it. The oxygen enters the blood in the tiny capillaries, hitching a ride on red blood cells and traveling through layers of blood veseels to the heart. The heart then sends the oxygenated (filled with oxygen) blood out to all the cells in the body.

Waiting to Exhale
When it's time to exhale (breathe out), everything happens in reverse: now it's the diaphragm's turn to say, "Move it!" Your diaphragm relaxes and moves up, pushing air out of the lungs. Your rib muscles become relaxed, and your ribs move in again, creating a smaller space in your chest.
By now your cells have used the oxygen they need, and your blood is carrying carbon dioxide and other wastes that must leave your body. The blood comes back through the capillaries and the wastes enter the alveoli. Then you breathe them out in the reverse order of how they came in: the air goes through the bronchioles, out the bronchi, out the trachea, and finally out through your mouth and nose.
The air that you breathe out not only contains wastes and carbon dioxide, but it's warm, too! As air travels through your body, it picks up heat along the way. You can feel this heat by putting your hand in front of your mouth or nose as you breathe out. What is the temperature of the air that comes out of your mouth or nose?
With all this movement, you might be wondering why things don't get stuck as the lungs fill and empty! Luckily, your lungs are covered by two really slick special layers called pleural membranes (say: ploo-ral mem-branes). These membranes are separated by a fluid that allows them to slide around easily while you inhale and exhale.





Click here to view a better 3d animation of a breathing lung. After clicking here u need to click on da image tht u see to start the animation.



NOTE: U NEED QUICKTIME TO VIEW THE ANIMATION




Time for Talk
Your lungs are important for breathing . . . and also for talking! Above the trachea (windpipe) is the larynx (say: larr-inks), which is sometimes called the voice box. Across the voice box are two tiny ridges called vocal cords, which open and close to make sounds. When you exhale air from the lungs, it comes through the trachea and larynx and reaches the vocal cords. If the vocal cords are closed and the air flows between them, the vocal cords vibrate and a sound is made.

The amount of air you blow out from your lungs determines how loud a sound will be and how long you can make the sound. Try inhaling very deeply and saying the names of all the kids in your class - how far can you get without taking the next breath? The next time you're outside, try shouting and see what happens - shouting requires lots of air, so you'll need to breathe in more frequently than you would if you were only saying the words. Experiment with different sounds and the air it takes to make them: when you giggle, you let out your breath in short bits, but when you burp, you let swallowed air in your stomach out in one long one! When you
hiccup, it's because the diaphragm moves in a funny way that causes you to breathe in air suddenly, and that air hits your vocal cords when you're not ready.

Love Your Lungs
Your lungs are amazing: they allow you to breathe, talk to your friend, shout at a game, sing, laugh, cry, and more! And speaking of a game, your lungs even work with your brain to help you inhale and exhale a larger amount of air at a more rapid rate when you're running a mile - all without you even thinking about it once.
Keeping your lungs looking and feeling healthy is a good idea, and the best way to keep your lungs pink and healthy is not to smoke. Smoking isn't good for any part of your body, and your lungs especially hate it. Cigarette smoke damages the cilia in the trachea so they can no longer move to keep dirt and other substances out of the lungs. Your alveoli say, "ouch," too, because the chemicals in cigarette smoke can cause the walls of the delicate alveoli to break down, making it much harder to breathe. Finally, cigarette smoke can damage the cells of the lungs so much that the healthy cells go away, only to be replaced by cancer cells. Lungs are normally tough and strong, but when it comes to cigarettes, they can be hurt easily - and it's often very difficult or impossible to make them better. If you need to work with chemicals in an art or shop class, be sure to wear a protective mask to keep chemical fumes from entering your lungs.

You can also show your love for your lungs by exercising! Exercise is good for every part of your body, and especially for your lungs and heart. When you take part in vigorous exercise (like biking, running, or swimming, for example), your lungs require more air to give your cells the extra oxygen they need. As you breathe more deeply and take in more air, your lungs become stronger and better at supplying your body with the air it needs to succeed. Keep your lungs healthy and they will thank you for life!
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Thts All Gud Bye, I m plannin to change my blog into a blog abt Human Biology..hehe....hope i succeed

Friday, September 22, 2006

Heart's Structure

Today I Will Share Wid U Information Abt Heart Structure.

Your Heart Has A Size OF Ur Fist.In the human body, the heart is normally situated slightly to the left of the middle of the thorax, underneath the sternum (breastbone). The heart is usually felt to be on the left side because the left heart (left ventricle) is stronger (it pumps to all body parts). The left lung is smaller than the right lung because the heart occupies more of the left hemithorax. The heart is enclosed by a sac known as the pericardium and is surrounded by the lungs. The pericardium is a double membrane structure containing a serous fluid to reduce friction during heart contractions. The mediastinum, a subdivision of the thoracic cavity, is the name of the heart cavity.

The apex is the blunt point situated in an inferior (pointing down and left) direction. A stethoscope can be placed directly over the apex so that the beats can be counted. This physical location is between the sixth and seventh rib, just to the left of the sternum. In normal adults, the mass of the heart is 250-350 g (8-11 oz), but extremely diseased hearts can be up to 1000 g (2 lb) in mass due to hypertrophy. It consists of four chambers, the two upper atria (singular: atrium ) and the two lower ventricles.

The function of the right side of the heart (see right heart) is to collect deoxygenated blood, in the right atrium, from the body and pump it, via the right ventricle, into the lungs (pulmonary circulation) so that carbon dioxide can be dropped off and oxygen picked up (gas exchange). This happens through a passive process called diffusion. The left side (see left heart) collects oxygenated blood from the lungs into the left atrium. From the left atrium the blood moves to the left ventricle which pumps it out to the body. On both sides, the lower ventricles are thicker and stronger than the upper atria. The muscle wall surrounding the left ventricle is thicker than the wall surrounding the right ventricle due to the higher force needed to pump the blood through the systemic circulation.



























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Have any1 read Digital Fortress by Dan Brown?

If yes, then have u guys solve the code behind the book yet?

128-10-93-85-10-128-98-112-6-6-25-126-39-1-68-78

This no. code have u guys solved it?

If no, then here is the way u do it. There r 128 chapters in the book. So those numbers r the chapter numbers.

128 means open chapter 128 and take the first letter on the page. do this for all the numbers.

U will get these alphabets " WECGEWHYAAIOTYNU "

Then U Apply The Caesar Square Box To The Encrypted Text 4 x 4

W E C G

E W H Y

A A I O

R T N U

read the text from up to down... WEAREWATCHINGYOU..it is still a bit messy but it reads. WE ARE WATCHING YOU!!

Thts it the code is solved!



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Joke Tym

Santa goes into a bar in London for a couple of drinks, as he is sitting alone and drinking, he notices a sexy womansitting in a corner and staring at him. He gulps down a couple of neats and gathering courage he goes upto her andsays, Excuse me....I m Santa from India. "Can i sit here and buy u a drink?"

The woman agrees and soon both of them r drinking away like good old frnds. Then after evrything is throughSanta and tht lady wlk out of the bar. Again gathering courage and slightly drunk Santa says, Eschcuse me, can wehave sex plz?

The lady says, "I Dont mind, but u see i m on my menstrual cycle."

"No Problem" says Santa "U proceed on ur menstrual cycle, i will follow u in my Honda Accord!!!"

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Bye guys, Comments r welcomed (but no one does)

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

What The Hell Is Happening?

Here is a lil flash work i did! hehe
http://img174.imageshack.us/my.php?image=monitorpresentationtf5.swf
It mite take sumtime to load and for u to view it....So leave it for 2 - 3mins and after tht view it. If, wen u sart to view it u see Jessica Alba's Face...Press F5 or refresh the page...and then view it! hehe

Below here is a video i wanna share wid u all...its fun! watch it...hehe


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BANGKOK, Thailand (CNN) -- Thailand's military coup leader has pledged to choose a new prime minister within two weeks and return power to the people as soon as possible.

But Gen. Sonthi Boonyaratglin, the head of Thailand's army and the newly declared leader, said Wednesday it could take a year to produce a new constitution leading to a fresh general election, Reuters reported.
He said military leaders were looking for candidates who loved "democracy and constitutional monarchy" to replace Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a bloodless coup d'etat on Tuesday as he attended the United Nations General Assembly in New York. (Watch Thais mingle with troops after bloodless coup -- 1:16)

"We have two weeks. After two weeks, we step out," Sonthi told a news conference, speaking as head of an interim "Political Reform Council" run by the military.
Meanwhile Britain's Foreign Office said that Thaksin would arrive in London later Wednesday on a "private visit."

The office did not say when Thaksin would arrive from New York. The Thai Embassy in London said it had no immediate information on Thaksin's whereabouts.

In a nationally televised address earlier in the day, Sonthi, flanked by the country's military and security force leaders, said the coup was complete and necessary to end intense conflicts in Thailand's society that Thaksin had created.

In his brief television address, Sonthi asked the Thai people to stay calm and support the coup leaders, The Associated Press reported.

Sonthi declared martial law, and international news channels such as CNN and the BBC were taken off the air.
On a TV station still under his government's control, however, Thaksin declared a state of emergency and insisted his government remained in charge of the armed forces and the capital.

He announced he was firing Sonthi and ordered him to report to the office of Deputy Prime Minister Chidchai Vanasaditya.

But it was Chidchai that reported to the offices of the armed forces Wednesday, an army spokesman told CNN. Despite media reports that he was taken into custody, the spokesman said Chidchai had left after checking in with the military.

Another deputy prime minister, Surakiart Sathirathai, told CNN that the supreme commander of Thailand's armed forces would be in charge of Bangkok. That officer, Gen. Ruengroj Mahasaranont, has made no public statement since the coup was announced.

Tanks and troops patrolled Bangkok early Wednesday after the army said the military was taking control. ((Watch tanks roll through the streets of Bangkok -- 3:53)
In his first public appearance, Sonthi repeated earlier statements that the newly created Council of Administrative Reform had revoked the Constitution.

He said Thaksin's policies had created serious rifts that needed to be healed and said Tuesday's coup was necessary after months of political turmoil.

Thaksin, however, insisted his government remained in control even as Sonthi and the chiefs of the armed forces met King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

With tanks and troops on the streets of Bangkok, the prime minister canceled his scheduled Tuesday evening speech to the U.N. General Assembly in New York and skipped the traditional luncheon of world leaders that opens the session.

Through a spokesman, Sonthi said he and the Party of Democratic Reform -- a previously unknown opposition party -- had taken power with the support of the country's armed forces.

The coup leaders declared Wednesday a holiday, with schools, banks and the country's stock market closed.
Troops on the streets adorned their weapons with yellow ribbons in a sign of loyalty to the king, and tanks were parked outside the government headquarters, which houses Thaksin's office.


News Reference : http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/09/20/thailand.coup/index.html
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Hope This Thing Ends Soon.~~
Joke Time!
A mouse and a lion walked into a bar, after drinking a couple of shots a giraffe walked in.

"Get a load of her" said the mouse, "wat a babe!" "Well, y not u try ur luck?" replied the lion.
So the mouse went over to the giraffe and started talkin to her. Within five mins they were out of the door and into the night.

The next day, da lion was drinking in the bar again, wen the mouse staggered in. The mouse was completely worn out, and could hardly hold himself up.The lion helped him up on to a stool, poured a drink down his throat and said, "Wat the hell happened to u? I saw u leave wid the giraffe, wat happened after tht? Was she all rite?"

The mouse replied, "Yeah, she was really sth, we went out for dinner, had a couple glasses of winem and she invited me back to her place to spend the night and oh, man! I've never had a night like it!!""But how cum u look so exhausted?" asked the lion

"Well....." said the mouse, "between the kisssin and the screwing, i must have run a thousand of miles!!!!"
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Bye Guys