6 responses

  1. Tonya
    January 20, 2011

    The trachea is SHORTER than the esophagus if it is 9-15 cm long and the esophagus is 10 inches long. Beats me why you would switch from metric to english units when you are comparing the two.

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  2. Aleesa lead
    August 15, 2015

    I’m not sure wether these comparisons are true :/

    Reply

    • Melinda
      March 10, 2018

      Original Post: (summarized)
      Trachea is SHORTER (at 10-15 cm) than the esophagus (at 10”). Person wondered why standard of measure was switched from Metric to ‘English’ (Imperial’) in comparison.
      Response to Post: quoted
      “I’m not sure wether these comparisons are true :/“

      My Post:
      The Trachea IS INDEED shorter.
      In inches: Trachea 3-½” – 6” ; Esophagus 10”
      Centimeters: Trachea 10-15 cm. ; Esophagus 25.8cm.

      The Scientific Model requires using consistent methods of measurements in every step. This is true with research, academia, literature, writing, manufacturing, clinical practice, and journalism. At first I also couldn’t see any reason to combine the two measurement standards until I posted them and saw how the 10 cm. Trachea and the 10” Esophagus gave the ‘false’ appearance of balance. False, because it implies they are balanced in size when in fact one is 2-½ to 3 times longer than the other!
      PS Great article! I loved it

      Reply

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