yes it does in many ways such as Exercise will effect your breathing and your heart rate by making them both faster. It does this because you need more oxygen to your muscles so you are breathing faster to get in more o2 and your heart beats faster to circulate that o2 to the muscles in your body.
In a Healthy individual with no underlying history of Asthma or reactive airway diseases Peak flow increases.
In any asthmatic individual peal flow decreases
running..
Yes
excess breathing and increased heart rate.
Heat effects the flow rate of lava because the hotter the lava is, the less viscous it is which allows it to flow faster than if it had a slow flow rate. If it has a low temperature, then the flow rate will be much slower because it has a high viscosity.
The short term effects are that your heart rate increases which means you blood pressure increasesThe long term effects are that you will have a lower resting heart rate and you will return to that quicker after stopping exercise (quicker recovery rate)For information about all the benefits of exercise, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Questions.
Peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR)
Endorphin rush, elevated heart rate, increased blood flow, increased oxygen intake, secretion of hormones, muscle break down, increased metabolism
they increase it, and if you didnt know that you should probably go back to first grade
Stress, Pain, Fear, Exercise, Smoking , Drugs.-Mrs. Lautner
Distinguish your resting heart rate, your maximum heart rate during exertion, and your recovery time. As you use aerobic (fitness, cardio) exercise, your resting heart rate and your recovery time will decrease as your maximum heart rate increases. The best kind of aerobic exercise for these effects is high intensity interval training. .
increases the heart rate
i dont know you idiots! think of it yourself