Did you know? The lightest organ in the human body is the lung.
The largest solid internal organ is your liver. It weighs approximately 3–3.5 pounds or 1.36–1.59 kilograms and is about the size of a football.
Reference ranges (95% inclusion) are proposed: brain, 1033 to 1404 g; liver, 603 to 1767 g; spleen, less than 230 g; right lung, 101 to 589 g; left lung, 105 to 515 g; right kidney, 38 to 174 g; and left kidney, 35 to 192 g.
The liver is the second heaviest organ in the body, which discharges bile. The weight of the liver is about 1.5 kg. The brain is the third heaviest organ with an approximate mass of 1.5 kg.
The skin is the body's largest organ.
You'll be surprised as to how much you could lose and still live. You can still have a fairly normal life without one of your lungs, a kidney, your spleen, appendix, gall bladder, adenoids, tonsils, plus some of your lymph nodes, the fibula bones from each leg and six of your ribs.
The mass of a body is can be zero whereas the weight of a body can never be zero.
In the normal adult, the lungs weigh approximately 1000 g. Lung volume increases from about 250 mL at birth to 6000 mL in the adult. The height of a normal adult lung is 27 cm at total lung capacity, but in the range of normal breathing it is approximately 24 cm in height.
The liver is a reddish-brown, wedge-shaped organ with two lobes of unequal size and shape. A human liver normally weighs approximately 1.5 kilograms (3.3 pounds) and has a width of about 15 centimetres (6 inches).
Research shows that people who are taller, weigh more (have a higher body mass index, or BMI), and have more lean body mass may have heavier organs. Of these factors, some research suggests that height may best correlate with most organ weights; taller people have organs that weigh more and are proportionately bigger.
For a 150lb average human being, a leg weighs about 26lb.
You can't live without a working liver. If your liver stops working properly, you may need a transplant. A liver transplant may be recommended if you have end-stage liver disease (chronic liver failure).
Skin is our largest organ—adults carry some 8 pounds (3.6 kilograms) and 22 square feet (2 square meters) of it. This fleshy covering does a lot more than make us look presentable. In fact, without it, we'd literally evaporate.
As with the other organs discussed, the authors propose establishing a reference range for kidney weights with those ranges being 81 to 160 g for the right kidney and 83 to 176 g for the left kidney, with the caveat that individuals dying with visceral congestion would likely have weights at the higher end of the range ...
Most people can get by with only one lung instead of two, if needed. Usually, one lung can provide enough oxygen and remove enough carbon dioxide, unless the other lung is damaged. During a pneumonectomy, the surgeon makes a cut (incision) on the side of your body.
The average brain weight of the adult male was 1336 gr; for the adult female 1198 gr. With increasing age, brain weight decreases by 2.7 gr in males, and by 2.2 gr in females per year.
Males' lungs are bigger not only in terms of absolute volume, but also in terms of their volume variations [25, 39–41]. Men, in fact, also have significantly larger mean values for all pulmonary variables, both volumes and flows, except resistance which is significantly lower in males [6, 12].
The lightest adult of all time is believed to be the Mexican woman Lucia Zarate who weighed only 4.7 pounds (2.13 kg) at the age of 17 (and was 21.5 inches tall). She had put on weight, and was up to 13 lb.
"It is impossible to have zero percent body fat," says Dr. Sutterer. Guys should have roughly two to five percent of essential fat, he says. It's just not humanly possible to have only 0.33 percent body fat.
Bodies come in all different shapes and sizes, and not all of them fall into the “skinny” category or even the “curvy” category. From naturally thin to muscular to soft and round, no two bodies are designed the exact same way.
The spleen is a small organ inside your left rib cage, just above the stomach. It's part of the lymphatic system (which is part of the immune system). The spleen stores and filters blood and makes white blood cells that protect you from infection.
Answer: The eyeball is the only organism which does not grow from birth. It is fully grown when you are born. When you look at a baby's face, so see mostly iris and little white. As the baby grows, you get to see more and more of the eyeball.
So, for example, in a person weighing 120 lbs. (54 kilograms), blood takes up about 9.6 to 12 lbs. (4.4 to 5.4 kg).