Cardiac output is the blood volume pushed out by the left ventricle per minute.
Stroke volume is the volume of blood pushed out of the left ventricle per contraction of the heart (each heart beat). So stroke volume into heart rate / minute gives you cardiac output.
cardiac output
cardiac output is heart rate multiplied by stroke volume,
Cardiac output = heart rate X stroke volume Thus, if the heart rate decreases so will the cardiac output, assuming the stroke volume is constant.
Lowers stroke volume
Cardiac Output is computed as your heart rate times your stroke volume (volume of blood ejected from the heart each beat). The main contributor when exercising is an acceleration in heart rate. Stroke volume can be increased, but only by prolonged aerobic training. To answer your Q, HR as has the main effect on cardiac output during the first stages of exercise.**The first few stages of cardiac exercise will 'affect' cardiac output, not 'effect' it. If you don't know the difference between the two, you should not be asking a question such as this...
No, cardiac output is the product of stroke volume and heart rate. Stroke volume refers to the amount of blood pumped by the heart in one beat, while cardiac output is the total amount of blood pumped by the heart in one minute. Typically, cardiac output is larger than stroke volume due to the inclusion of heart rate in the calculation.
It's decreased ... unless the rate falls, which is the normal cardiac response.
CO=HRXSV, Where HR is heart rate and SV is stroke volume
cardiac output
Cardiac output is calculated by multiplying the heart rate (number of heartbeats per minute) by the stroke volume (amount of blood ejected by the heart with each beat). The formula is: Cardiac output = Heart rate x Stroke volume.
Cardiac output is determined by the heart rate and stroke volume. The heart rate is the number of heartbeats per minute, while stroke volume is the amount of blood ejected from the heart with each beat. Cardiac output is calculated by multiplying heart rate by stroke volume.
Yes. CO = HR x SV CO - cardiac output HR - heart rate SV - stroke volume