Bronchi is branched in primary and secondary. bronchi is branch of bronchus.
there are two primary bronchi which branch off into secondary bronchi which supply air to the lobes of the lungs
trachea- primary bronchi- secondary bronchi- tertiary bronchi- bronchiole- alveoli
primary , secondary and tertiary brochioles
Yes. You have primary, secondary, tertiary and about seventeen such generations of bronchi. They are part of the lungs.
Trachea, primary bronchi, secondary bronchi, tertiary bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli!
The trachea branches into the left and right main bronchi, which further divide into smaller bronchi within the lungs. These smaller bronchi continue to branch into bronchioles, which eventually lead to alveoli where gas exchange occurs.
The trachea branches into two primary bronchi which farther branch into secondary bronchi.
Yes a primary bronchus carries air toward each lung. After reaching the lungs, the primary bronchi branch off into secondary bronchi which carry the air to the lobes of the lungs, three on the right and two on the left.
bronchi divides in primary bronchi . Which divides in secondary and tertiary.
The trachea, also known as the "windpipe," is the largest tube of the respiratory system. In the adult human it is approximately 5 inches long, and an inch in diameter. It technically begins at the inferior edge of the larynx (aka "voice-box") and continues down toward the lungs. At the inferior end of the trachea it bifurcates, or divides, into two slightly smaller tubes known as bronchi. The primary bronchi each divide into "secondary bronchi." On the right side, the primary bronchus (the term for a single bronchi), divides into a superior and an intermediate bronchus (secondary bronchi) before it enters into the right lung. On the left side, the primary bronchus enters the left lung, then divides into a superior and and inferior bronchus (secondary bronchi.)
what is longer considering the primary bronchi