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Your sleeping heart rate is usually slower than your resting heart rate while awake. The actual number of beats will depend on different factors, such as fitness, resting rate, age, and whether you have any cardiac issues.
While high cholesterol may result in atherosclerosis, there is no relationship to its effect on heart rate.
Yes. That is an acceptable heart rate.
when heart rate increases, blood pressure rises. When heart rate decreases, blood pressure drops. medications, and diseases affects the blood pressure. Source: About Blood Pressure
A sleeping baby would have a faster heart beat because children have a faster heart rate than adults even when they are sleeping.
Sleeping, that's when your heart is the slowest too. Soccer makes it elevate rapidly.
No its not it is to high. Having a rate of 170 would be much better.
If a 12 year old has a heart rate of 170 while exercising they should see a doctor immediately. The heart rate is very high so they should go, because its very bad for the child.
Children naturally have a faster sleeping heart rate than adults, so the sleeping baby would have a faster beat.
To have a high rate of respiration requires a high blood flow to distribute the oxygen to the tissues, this increases the heart rate it also increasing the blood flow to the tissues.
The intensity of any activity has an effect on the heart rate. For example, high impact exercise such as Zumba or running increases the heart rate, while a person at rest shows a decrease in heart rate.
The American Heart Association recommends a target heart rate of 50 percent to 85 percent of your maximum heart rate. Your maximum heart rate is about 220 minus your age. A heart rate of 158 would be at the high end of the 85 percent zone if you were 35 years old.