the question is not sufficiently specified to enable a good answer in a short essay. There are many kinds and degrees of "Hemorrhage"
No. A hemorrhage causes a loss in blood/plasma, and that will decrease the hydrostatic pressure of the vessels --> decrease blood pressure.
Blood has a normal viscosity dependent on adequate hydration and the absence of any illness that could affect normal electrolyte balance in the body. As blood thickens, it becomes harder for blood vessels to return the blood through the venous and arterial blood vessels. This increases the work of the heart, as a pump, to move the thickened blood to the brain and vital organs, out to the limbs, and have it return again for oxygenation and the process continues again. Various factors combine to increase heart rate and blood pressure.
If you are hemorrhaging, your vital signs may be affected. This includes lowering of blood pressure and increase in pulse.
No. An hemorrhage is an escape of blood from a ruptured blood vessel (it can be a wound or a bruise, or something really nasty that is internal hemorrhage). Hypotension is the term for low blood pressure.
It causes blood pressure to increase.
yes
One can drink coffee to increase blood pressure. Raid breathing can also increase blood pressure.
An increase in blood pressure, blood volume, or permeability of the filtration barrier would increase net filtration pressure. On the other hand, a decrease in blood pressure, blood volume, or an increase in plasma protein concentration would decrease net filtration pressure.
Yes, when blood volume decreases, the blood pressure tends to increase. This is because a lower volume of blood circulating in the blood vessels leads to a higher force exerted on the vessel walls, resulting in an increase in blood pressure.
Any kind of pain will usually increase blood pressure (temporarily). This is normal.
how is abnormally functioning colon related in increase blood pressure
No, hemorrhage with a large loss of blood typically causes a decrease in blood pressure due to a reduction in blood volume and, consequently, cardiac output. As blood volume drops, the heart struggles to pump enough blood to maintain adequate pressure in the circulatory system. Initially, the body may compensate through mechanisms like increased heart rate and vasoconstriction, but severe hemorrhage ultimately leads to hypotension and shock.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings died of a cerebral hemorrhage on December 14, 1953, at the age of 57. A cerebral hemorrhage is a type of stroke that occurs when a blood vessel in the brain ruptures and causes bleeding in the surrounding tissues. Rawlings had a history of high blood pressure, which may have contributed to her risk of experiencing a cerebral hemorrhage.