it depends how hard you push
arteries in your heart push together and push the blood to your veins
Not heart disease. Heart disease is generally caused by saturated fat built up in the persons arteries and veins causing the heart to push harder to get the blood circulating. So there is strain on the heart which makes it prone to heart attack and a lot more likely to get heart disease.
When the heart chambers are contracting at their maximum force to push blood out of the heart it's called systole.
The same buttons you push anywhere else
The first beat is to push the blood out and the second is to get the blood back into the heart.
Yes, allergies can cause chest pain. If a person inhales an allergen into the mid-lower respiratory system (throat/lungs) and that allergen causes an allergic response such as swelling then there is the potential for chest pain to occur. But, keep in mind that unresolved chest pain should be evaluated by a physician as soon as possible; this could be chest pain relating to a heart attack and not an allergic response. One way to tell the difference: if the pain gets worse when you inhale and exhale or push down on your chest...then its probably not a heart attack, but if the chest pain remains unchanged with pressing down or inhaling/exhaling is more then likely to be related to the heart and might need quick treatment.
The most common swelling is of the ankles due to heart failure. the heart is simpluy not strong enough to push the blood all the way round the body.
Pain in the chest is most often associated with GI disturbance leading to production of Gas in the body. this gas tries to push/displace heart and other organs in the body. therefore there is an intense pain in the chest. pain the chest could also be associated due to problem related to heart. mostly if an elder person is having chest pain, consulting with the doctor is the best thing.
If a person is experiencing chest pain on the left side of their body, this could indicate a heart attack or other medical conditions, such as a lung problem or inflammation of the lining around a person's heart.
Push ups benefit your chest, shoulders, upper and lower back, abs, glutes, hamstrings, calfs, feet, heart muscle and many other areas. Push ups are good for beginners or experts.
Push the Heart was created in 2006.
The sternum and the rib cage extends into the chest cavity and divides the chest into two as well as the pleural cavity, the mediastinum (primary source of the separation) and chest muscles that push the lungs up to cause inhalation. The rib bones and sternum not only provide a separation but they also protect each lung and the heart from being damaged. If you need to do further research use the words thoracic cavity on the search engines and in the medical books.
well u have 3 muscles in your chest and this excries does the top of yr chest
The aim of chest compressions is to squash the heart under the chest. Every compression 'squashes' the heart, this causes all of the blood to be pumped out of the heart and off round the body, taking the oxygen with it (assuming you're doing the breaths as well). You then come back up, allowing the heart to refill before you compress again. In this way you are reproducing a heartbeat for someone who doesn't have one.
A bigger chest and triceps.
The chest and TRiceps
arteries in your heart push together and push the blood to your veins