Hypertension, clots, strokes, migranes...
A person above age of 13, who is not athletic, should have a pulse of 60-100 beats per minute.
The number of times your heart beats in a minute, the heart rate.
Any where between 70 and 80 beats per minuteThe average pulse for an adult is anywhere from 60 to 100 beats a minute. If a person has a lower heart beat their heart be would be 40 to 100 beats a minute.
Pulse rate.
find a pulse using your index and middle fingers, and count the number of beats in one minute. -apex :)
70 to 80 beats per minute. The athlete will have 60 beats per minute.
TPR - Temperature, Pulse & Respiration. The average temperature of a pig is usually 38.5 degrees, also piglets are a little bit higher being 39 degrees. The pulse of a pig is usually around 110 beats per minute. Respiration for piglets ranges from 20-40 breaths per minutes and 15-20 beats per minute for sows.Animal Care Student :)
The average pulse rate is 40 to 70 beats per minute, with respiration being 10 to 30 breaths per minute for beef cows and 18 to 28 breaths per minute for dairy cows.
A person above age of 13, who is not athletic, should have a pulse of 60-100 beats per minute.
A normal pulse rate for a resting person should be around 60 beats per minute. During exercise, depending on what kind of exercise one is doing, a normal pulse should be between 100 and 180 beats per minute.
Pulse rate units is beats per minute.
the average pulse rate is 72 beats/ minute
Beats per minute is pulse rate.
Pulse
Pulse rate (or heart rate) is measured in the number of beats per minute. So, the most accurate would be to count the number of beats in an entire minute. If the person's heart rate is regular, though, pulse can be counted for a shorter amount of time, such as 10 seconds (multiply by 6 to get the beats per minute) or even 6 seconds (multiply by 10 to get the beats per minute) to give a fairly accurate count.
It's not necessarily a formula that people use when determining a patients pulse rate per minute. Under normal circumstances, a medical professional will check the radial pulse (the wrist area) for thirty seconds. How ever many beats the person counts, they simply multiply it by two to discover the BPM (beats per minute). For a more accurate reading (or when a patient has irregular beats) sometimes the health care provider will count the beats for a full minute and report that number. Remember: never use your thumb to check a person's pulse! Your thumb has a pulse rate of its own.
90bpm (beats per minute).