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.
no its not a normal rate would be about 70-90 beats per minute
Seriously? 30/15=2 21x2=42... but the pulse is the number of beats in a minute so it would be 42x2 and thus her pulse would be 84.
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.
A march would 70-80 per minute.
Oh, dude, math time! So, if the heart beats 72 times in a minute, that means it beats 18 times in a quarter of a minute. Just divide 72 by 4 and boom, you got your answer. Like, it's simple math, but hey, your heart's doing all the hard work anyways, right?
If you want heartbeats per minute, you would have to multiply by 6, not by 10, in this case, since there are only 60 seconds in a minute.
It beats 75-85 beats per minute. In 45 seconds it would beat about 65 beats.
The most accurate would be for one full minute so you can get the beats per minute, but you can go for half a minute and then multiply times two to get beats per minute.
At 60 beats per minute (BPM), there are 60 quarter notes (crotchets) in one minute. Since each quarter note contains 2 quavers (eighth notes), you would have 120 quavers in 60 beats per minute.
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.
A normal resting heart rate would be 60 - 100 beats per minute.
According to one study on chronic fluorosis in sheep, the control group's sheep heartbeat was 110 give or take 15 heartbeats (I am presuming the number was beats per minute, for bpm was not stated in the article.) So, a sheep's heart would beat around 1.6 to 2.1 beats per second.