Yes. Anxiety increases sympathetic tone and that produces increased heart rate.
yes. it increases to about 20 -130 beats per minute. but if you are always in stress it lowers down to about 20 -70 beats
Yes. When you worry, your sympathetic nervous system is activated. This leads to increased heart rate.
Yes it can.
A heart rate of 60-100 is normal and the younger a person is the higher the heart rate is so a heart rate of 92 in a 13 year old girl is not deemed abnormal. As for the chest pain, any chest pain that causes you concern should be checked out by your GP.
A normal resting heart rate is 60-100, with women being at the higher end of that spectrum and men being lower. For citation see http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/heart-rate/AN01906
Anxiety attacks does not cause heart attacks in normal heart. The anxiety may cause heart attack in previously compromised heart. You can have heart attack, if you are a patient of severe angina pectoris.
Yes
60-100 is the normal heart rate for an adult, but it varies per person. If your heart rate is normally around 90, a heart rate of 60 is going to be abnormally low. Also, many factors can cause a change in your heart rate, such as a change in body temperature, pain, exercise, nervousness, etc.
pain does increase your heart rate
A heart rate of 60-100 is normal and the younger a person is the higher the heart rate is so a heart rate of 92 in a 13 year old girl is not deemed abnormal. As for the chest pain, any chest pain that causes you concern should be checked out by your GP.
The effects of the heart rate are immense. When there is abnormality in heart rate, the person will experience breathlessness,pain in chest like symptoms. Even clot in blood veins makes the passage narrow and that may also cause erratic behavior of heart rate.
Exercise, emotions, drugs can make your heart rate increase.
Normally being fit strengthens your heart and slows down your heart when you rest.
Yes, but this and every other stimulant increases your heart rate.
Yes!
No oxygen
no. Unless it's heart pain --a condition called angina pectoris which is caused by blocked arteries in the heart. Slowing the heart in that situation causes the heart to need less oxygen and have less frequent and severe angina. Beta blocker drugs do this. But slowing your heart won't help your back pain, kidney stone pain, etc.
A normal resting heart rate is 60-100, with women being at the higher end of that spectrum and men being lower. For citation see http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/heart-rate/AN01906
heart palpatations, a low heart rate.
It can cause you to vomit, have abdominal pain and reduce your heart rate.