PLEURAL CAVITY


The lungs are surrounded by two membranes, the 'pleurae'. The outer pleura is attached to the chest wall and is known as the parietal pleura; the inner one is attached to the lung and other visceral tissues and is known as the visceral pleura. In between the two is an actual thin space known as the 'pleural cavity' or 'pleural space'.
The parietal pleura is highly sensitive to pain; the visceral pleura is not.

Contents
Functions
Blood supply
Fluid
Diseases
See Also
Additional images
External links

Functions


Pleural fluid serves several functions. It lubricates the pleural surfaces and allows the pleural layers to slide against each other easily during respiration. Pleural fluid also provides the surface tension that keeps the lung surface in close apposition with the chest wall. This allows optimal inflation of alveoli during respiration. It also directly transmits pressures from the chest wall to the visceral pleural surface (and hence, the lung). Therefore, movements of the chest wall during breathing are coupled closely to movements of the

Blood supply


The visceral pleura has a dual blood supply from the bronchial and pulmonary arteries.

Fluid


It is filled with 'pleural fluid', a serous fluid produced by the pleura. A normal 70 kg human has approximately 12-15 mL of pleural fluid.
In normal pleurae, most fluid is produced by the parietal circulation (intercostal arteries) via bulk flow and reabsorbed by the lymphatic system. Thus, pleural fluid is continuously produced and reabsorbed. The rate of reabsorption may increase up to 40x before significant amounts of fluid accumulate within the pleural space.
In humans, there is no anatomical connection between the left and right pleural cavities, so in cases of pneumothorax (see below), the other hemithorax will still be able to function normally.

Diseases


Diseases involving the pleura include:

Pneumothorax: a collection of air within the pleural cavity, arising either from the outside or from the lung. Pneumothoraces may be traumatic, iatrogenic, or spontaneous. A tension pneumothorax is a particular type of pneumothorax where the air may enter (though a defect of the chest wall, lung, or airways) on inspiration, but cannot exit on expiration. Each breath increases the amount of trapped air in the chest cavity, leading to further lung compression. This is a medical emergency.

Pleural effusion: a fluid accumulation within the pleural space. Abnormal collections of pleural fluid may be due to excessive fluid volume (i.e. excess intravenous fluids, renal failure), decreased fluid protein (i.e. cirrhosis), heart failure, bleeding (hemothorax), infections (parapneumonic effusions, empyema), inflammation, malignancies, or perforation of thoracic organs (i.e. chylothorax, esophageal rupture).

Pleural tumors: abnormal growths on the pleurae. These may be benign (i.e. pleural plaques) or malignant in nature. Mesothelioma is a type of malignant cancer associated with asbestos exposure.

See Also



Trachea

Capillaries

Larynx

Pharynx

Epiglottis

Rings of cartilage

Bronchus

Bronchioles

Thoracic cavity

Additional images



External links



Photo of dissection at kenyon.edu

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