FACTOID # 132: Central European men don’t teach. In Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, over 75 percent of lower secondary teachers are female.
 
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Encyclopedia > Vital capacity

Vital capacity is the maximum volume of air that a person can exhale after maximum inhalation. For the play Breath by Samuel Beckett, see Breath (play). ...


A person's vital capacity can be measured by a spirometer which can be a wet or regular spirometer. In combination with other physiological measurements, the vital capacity can help make a diagnosis of underlying lung disease. Spirometry (meaning the measuring of breath) is the most common of the Pulmonary Function Tests (PFTs), measuring lung function, specifically the measurement of the amount (volume) and/or speed (flow) of air that can be inhaled and exhaled. ... Leonardo da Vincis Vitruvian Man, an important early achievement in the study of physiology. ...


Vital capacity is the maximum amount of air a person can expel from the lungs after first filling the lungs to their maximum extent and then expiring to the maximum extent (about 4600 milliters). It equals the inspiratory reserve volume plus the tidal volume plus the expiratory reserve volume.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Vital capacity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (161 words)
Vital capacity is the total amount of air that a person can expire after a complete inspiration.
A very important tool in determining if a patient has obstructive or restrictive lung disease is the Percent of gas that is expired in the first second of a Forced Expiratory Capacity.
Obstructive lung disease can be determined by dividing the Forced Vital Capacity in one second (FEV1) by the Forced Vital Capacity (FVC).
BIOMEDICAL RESULTS FROM SKYLAB - Pulmonary Function Evaluation During and Following Skylab (Sec.5,Ch.37) (2071 words)
Vital capacity, the only parameter measured preflight, in-flight, and postflight, showed in-flight decreases approaching 10 percent in the case of the Skylab 3 Pilot and for the Commander, Scientist Pilot, and Pilot on Skylab 4 (table 37-III and figure 37-2).
Vital capacities were measured during Skylab Medical Experiments Altitude Test (SMEAT)(ref. 5), a ground-based 56-day simulated Skylab mission in which the environment was comparable to Skylab with the important exception of the presence of Earth’s gravity.
However, the proportion of vital capacity decreases directly attributable to other factors such as body fluid shifts and a cephalad shift of the diaphragm cannot be determined from the present data.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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