Heart rate goes down every year you age. If someone is between 13-17, than their heart rate will be around (no medical citation is used here) about 70-90 bpm at relaxation. A hyper arrhythmic heart pumping due to exercising would pump for them about 110-220 bpm. So I would say that it is normal for it to drop to about 60, sometimes 50, bpm and nowhere higher than 75 bpm for a relaxing 17-21 year old. Drugs can and will play a roll in how much your heart bpm on a hyper scale and a depressing scale. Alcohol will lower the bpm, and a drug like Cocaine will raise it substantially. Another factor that will raise bpm is Panic and induced nervousness and/or anxiety.
when you exercise It rises. And when you rest it drops back down to normal.
Depends on which drops you use but even if they go blue they will turn back to their normal colour in a couple of days time there are no infections during it so no worries.
12 drops, 3X a day.
The blood glucose is used by the muscles during exercise. The level of the glucose in the blood drops down. This stimulates the secretion of the hormone called as glucagon. This glucagon is secreted by the alpha cells of the endocrine part of the pancreas.
No. Usually implantation bleeding is a bright red to brown drops of blood. No clots.
normal
It drops during hibernation
Eye drops
If heart rate drops below 60, it is called bradycardia. And, during exercise, the body consumes a lot of energy, to fulfil this requirement of the body, the heart has to pump faster. In bradycardia, heart beats slowly and it is dangerouse as it might not be able to pump blood for the requirement of tissues especially brain, therefore it is very dangerous to have bradycardia after exercise.
It is normal for various types of bleeding to occur during a first period. For some people, it may be light, just a few drops. For others, it might be extremely heavy.
When a stream floods, it deposits much of the sediment that it carries onto its floodplain
The Daily Orbit - 2012 U-S- Drops the Bomb 1-227 was released on: USA: 22 July 2013