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The heart beat is the beating of the heart. Blood pressure is the amount of pressure the heart beat causes the blood to push against the blood vessels.
blood pressure
So many things can influence the number of beats per minutes. among them are the adrenalin level, the blood pressure itself, the water level in the blood and the 'viscosity' of the blood. Exercise in general can increase the beat per minute. reduce in blood pressure will result in increase beat per minute to compensate the reduction in blood pressure. in general, the beat per minute will increase if there are an increase demand of oxygen to vital organ such as brain, heart itself and the kidney.
Go to the ER now!
this is the normal heart beat and because of this we take those amount of blood which need us
Yes it can. If I remember rightly it can make your heart beat faster. It can interact with blood pressure medications.
because the pressure of our blood increases which goes to our heart and so when fainting the heart beat increases
250mls
There is around 5 litres of blood in your body at any given time and the heart pumps on average 70 ml of blood per beat. Most people have an average resting heart rate of about 70 beats a minute (approximately). So if you multiply the amount of blood that the heart can pump by the number of beats per minute, you actually get around 4.9 litres of blood, almost all of it. So, in a minute, you will pump all the blood througout your body.
the ECG signal is traveling faster than the pressure recording wave.
120-150, according to a 2nd grader.Apart from this it has to do with your blood pressure, your body fat and so on. Best would be to find it out for yourself..
Your "pulse" is how fast your heart is beating, and is measured in how many beats in a minute. This is controlled by several things. One is how healthy your heart is (if you have a strong heart, i.e. from exercising, your heart does not have to beat as often for the same effect and therefore your pulse will be lower). If you are exercising, your pulse or heart rate will increase to meet the increasing oxygen demands of your muscles. Also, if you are afraid, stressed out, or angry, your sympathetic nervous system stimulates the "flight or fight" response which increases your heart rate for the same reason. Your Blood pressure, however, is how much pressure is actually being exerted on the insides of your blood vessels when your heart beats. This is affected by three things: the size of your blood vessels, the strength of your heart, and the amount of fluid or blood in your bloodstream. The flight or fight response can affect these things by causing your heart to beat harder, therefore exerting more pressure, and by causing your blood vessels to constrict, or narrow. Both of these things raise your blood pressure. Again, exercise also causes your heart to beat harder and raises your blood pressure. Nicotine causes your blood vessels to constrict and this increases blood pressure. If you are dehydrated or bleeding severely, your blood pressure goes down because there is less fluid in your blood stream. Your body will compensate for this by increasing your pulse rate and constricting your blood vessels. The numbers you see in a blood pressure represent your systolic Blood Pressure (the first and usually higher number) and your diastolic Blood Pressure. The systolic blood pressure is the pressure exerted on your blood vessels when your heart pumps. This is why this pressure is higher. The diastolic Blood Pressure is the pressure in your blood vessels in between heart beats. Review: Related Links for more info.