Pressures That Cause the Movement of Air In and Out of the Lungs The lung is an elastic structure that collapses like a balloon and expels all its air through the
trachea whenever there is no force to keep it inflated. Also, there are no attachments between the lung
and the walls of the chest cage, except where it is suspended at its hilum from the mediastinum,the
middle section of the chest cavity. Instead, the lung ―floats‖ in the thoracic cavity, surrounded by a thin
layer of pleural fluid that lubricates movement of the lungs within the cavity. Further, continual
suction of excess fluid into lymphatic channels maintains a slight suction between the visceral surface
of the lung pleura and the parietal pleural surface of the thoracic cavity. Therefore, the lungs are held
to the thoracic wall as if glued there, except that they are well lubricated and can slide freely as the
chest expands and contracts.
Alveolar Pressure
Alveolar pressure is the pressure of the air inside the lung alveoli. When the
glottis is open and no air is flowing into or out of the lungs, the pressures in all parts ofthe respiratory
tree, all the way to the alveoli, are equal to atmospheric pressure, which is considered to be
zeroreference pressure in the airways—that is, 0 cm water pressure. To cause inward flow of air into
the alveoliduring inspiration, the pressure in the alveoli must fall to a value slightly below atmospheric
pressure (below 0). The second curve (labeled ―alveolar pressure‖) of Figure 37-2 demonstrates that
during normal inspiration, alveolar pressure decreases to about −1 centimeters of water. This slight
negative pressure is enough to pull 0.5 liter of air into the lungs in the 2 seconds required for normal
quiet inspiration. During expiration, opposite pressures occur: The alveolarpressure rises to about +1
centimeter of water, and this forces the 0.5 liter of inspired air out of the lungs uring the 2 to 3 seconds
of expiration.