The lung capacity vary on the person's age, gender, where he lives and more. For example, if he lives in a smoke-free area his lung capacity is probably more. The average lung capacity for a human is 4-6 liters of air and the average lung capacity for a 10-11 year old is around 4 liters.
Adult lung capacity is about three liters.
It depends on your age, but 10 litres is a VERY good lung capacity for an adult. For a child, 10 litres seems ridiculous because the average is 2 litres.
The average lung capacity for a 60-year-old female is around 2.4-3.1 liters. However, this can vary based on factors like height, weight, fitness level, and overall health. Regular exercise and maintaining a healthy lifestyle can help improve and maintain lung capacity.
Lung capacity can not be increased by a disorder.
My tidal lung capacity was lower. I know the difference because in the tidal lung capacity you are taking in less breath. When you are doing the vital lung capacity, you take in more breath.
it has lung cancer
Exercising increases the lung capacity.
Your total lung capacity is the total volume of the lung after maximum inspiration. (average 6 litres).
The average maximum capacity is around 6 liters of air, but when you exhale approximately 1.2 liters stays in your lungs. An easy way to measure this is to take a balloon and take a deep breath, then inflate the balloon as much as you can with just that breath. Measure the resulting diameter of the balloon in centimeters, then use the formula: Volume = (4 / 3)(3.1416)(diameter / 2)^3 Then divide by 1000 to get your lung capacity in liters.
The lungs and heart, when diseased or injured could decrease lung capacity. Obesity would also reduce lung capacity
Lung capacity is different for every person. Height, weight, age, health, smoking/non-smoking, etc. all affect your personal lung capacity. This question is impossible to determine. (There are general estimates out there, but they aren't very accurate.)