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21.4B: Lobes, Fissures, and Lobules

  • Page ID
    7983
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    The lungs are located on either side of the heart and are separated by fissures into lobes, three in the right and two lobes in the left.

    Learning Objectives
    • Distinguish between the right and left lungs based on their lobes, fissures, and lobules

    Key Points

    • Human lungs are located in two cavities on either side of the heart and are separated into lobes by fissures.
    • The two lungs are not identical. The right lung has three lobes and left has two lobes. They are further divided into segments and then into lobules.
    • Lobules are hexagonal divisions of the lungs that are the smallest subdivision visible to the naked eye.
    • The right lung is divided by the oblique fissure, which separates the inferior lobe from the middle and superior lobes, and the horizontal fissure, which separates the superior from the middle lobe.
    • The human left lung is divided into two lobes, an upper and a lower, by the oblique fissure. It has a cardiac notch, a concave impression molded to accommodate the shape of the heart.
    • The lingula is not technically a lobe, but is the left lung equivalent of the right lung’s middle lobe.
    • The hilium is the root of the lung and contains the structures involved in pulmonary circulation, as well as the pulmonary nerves and lymph vessels.

    Key Terms

    • hilium: The root of the lung that contains the pulmonary veins and arteries that supply blood to the lungs.
    • cardiac notch: A concave impression molded into the left lung to accommodate the shape of the heart.

    The lungs are located in two chambers of the thoracic cavity on either side of the heart. Though similar in appearance, the two lungs are not identical, nor wholly symmetrical.

    Fissures are double folds of pleura that divide the lung into lobes. There are three lobes in the right lung and two in the left lung. The lobes are further divided into segments and then into lobules, which are hexagonal divisions of the lungs that are the smallest visible subdivision.

    The lobes are further divided into segments and then into lobules, hexagonal divisions of the lungs that are the smallest subdivision visible to the naked eye.

    The Right Lung

    This is a schematic view of the lobes of the lungs. The right lung has three lobes and the left lung has two.

    The lobes of the lungs: The right lung has three lobes and the left lung has two. (Copyright Public Domain)

    The right lung is five centimeters shorter than the left lung to accommodate the diaphragm, which rises higher on the right side over the liver; it is also broader. The volume, the total capacity, and the weight of the right lung is greater than that of the left. The right lung is divided into three lobes.

    The Upper Lobe (Right Lung)

    The upper lobe is the largest lobe of the right lung. It extends from the apex of the lung down to the horizontal and oblique fissures. It bears apical, anterior, and posterior bronchopulmonary segments.

    The Middle Lobe (Right Lung)

    The middle lobe is the smallest lobe of the right lung, located between the horizontal and oblique fissures. It bears medial and lateral bronchopulmonary segments.

    The Lower Lobe (Right Lung)

    The lower lobe is the bottom lobe of the right lung. It lies beneath the oblique fissure. It bears medial, lateral, superior, anterior, and posterior bronchopulmonary segments.

    The Left Lung

    This is a cross-section view of the left lung. It shows how the left lung is different than the right lung due to the cardiac notch, a concave depression that accommodates the shape of the heart.

    The Left Lung: This has a concave depression that accommodates the shape of the heart, called the cardiac notch.

    The human left lung is smaller and narrower that the right lung, and is divided into two lobes, an upper and a lower, by the oblique fissure. The left lung has only two formal lobes because of the space taken up in the left side of the chest cavity by the heart, though it does have the lingula, which is similar to a lobe.

    The left lung has a depression on the medial side of its surface called the cardiac notch, a concave impression molded to accommodate the shape of the heart.

    The Upper Lobe (Left Lung)

    The upper lobe of the left lung contains anterior and apicoposterior bronchopulmonary segments. It is above the oblique fissure.

    The Lower Lobe (Left Lung)

    The lower lobe of the left lung contains superior, anterior, posterior, medial, and lateral bronchopulmonary segments.

    The Lingula

    The lingula is not formally considered to be a lobe. It is a small, tongue-like projection of the left lung that is analogous to the middle lobe of the right lung. It contains superior and inferior bronchopulmonary segments.

    The Hilium

    Above and behind the cardiac impression is a triangular depression named the hilum. The hilum is the root of the lung where that contains structures that supply the lungs with blood, lymph fluid, and innervation, such as the pulmonary vein, pulmonary artery, pulmonary nerves, and lymphatic vessels.

    These structures are enclosed by pleura. There is a hilium for each of the lungs found in the mediastinum (backside) of the lungs. The hilium is thinner in the left lung compared to the right lung because it lies between the cardiac notch and the groove for the aorta.

    The hilium is important because it is the primary way in which the respiratory system links with the cardiovascular and nervous systems.


    21.4B: Lobes, Fissures, and Lobules is shared under a CC BY-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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