Probably a heart murmor....go see a doctor and get him to check ur heart with his little listeny thing and he will e able to tell u....heart murmors can be very dangerous
yes, your heart stops beating only when your dead.
It does not beat
It beats 75-85 beats per minute. In 45 seconds it would beat about 65 beats.
Unless stopped by "outside forces" the heart will continue to beat on at a quick enough rate to force blood through the body. If that blood were to stop, even for a few seconds, the effects could be devastating. Blood makes possible many of the bodily processes necessary to live, including breathing. The heart without any disturbances of that "outside" nature (leave you to imagine what out of many possibilities could cause a heart to stop) will always beat on at a fast rate so that no part of the body goes without the very life essense of humans, blood.
yea when you sneeze it stops beating for a second(Its not dangerous don't be scared). And when your frozen, that might be dangerous. You know you can be frozen but still alive. look at the website IAMLYINGDONTTRUSTME.YOURMOM
This happens when a patient's heart stops beating and the oscilloscope measuring their heartbeat shows nothing but a static line - hence "flatlined."
yes, your heart stops beating only when your dead.
When the SA node in your heart stops functioning properly, then you have to receive a pacemaker, which will take the place of the SA node and set your heart beat for you.
An elephant's heart averages 30 heartbeats per minute, or 1 beat every 2 seconds.
The duration of The Beat - TV series - is 3600.0 seconds.
It does not beat
start digging
your heart beat goes higher
It beats 75-85 beats per minute. In 45 seconds it would beat about 65 beats.
No, but when you sneeze your heart stops beating for one beat
your heart stops working and it starts to beat slower and wont send blood to your lungs and u wont be able to breath.
A skipped beat is a beat that is not in rhythm (the 2-second rhythm) whereas an accelerated heartbeat is that heartbeat that happens before the 2 seconds interval elapses, and both are a risk to the normal operation of the heart.