your body starts to know that you need more of someting and makes your heart rate increas so that it can produce more of it
Diabetes
Still fever. A fever is a noun, so it does not change in different tenses. However, to use it in the past tense, for example, it would be similar to this: 'I had a fever' or 'It was just a fever'. The word itself does not change though.
The temperature of the fluid
you would expect a color change in oil of wintergreen because it has an OH group added to the FeCl3 which causes a purple color
There's no set rule, mostly because the common cold does not in and of itself have an effect on pulse rate, at least that I can point to. In the field, I would expect to see someone with a severe cold to present a slightly elevated pulse. So if the patient were resting normal at 72bpm I might expect to see 80bpm (although the margin for error here is too great to say it causes a reall 10% increase).
Metabolism does not occur in the heart.
temperature of the fluid.
The only person that can answer this is your friend. Don't expect a man to change for you.
His pulse rate would decreaseHis pulse would increase
Count pulse
the standard pulse for ages 6-15 would be from ranges of 70-100. For an adult though it would be 60-100.
cause you would have different arteries in your arm