This is an interesting question: Yes, music does affect respirations, blood pressure, and heart rate. Since your question basically asks for the effects on heart rate, we will discuss this in more detail: fast musical tempos increase heart rate while slow tempos reduce them. However, the most interesting fact is this: the style of music and the personal view's of the listener made no difference at all. The only thing that mattered was the tempo.
There is no evidence that low frequency sounds affect the heart.
The scientific term for the contraction of the heart is "systole." This is when the heart muscle contracts to pump blood out of the heart's chambers and into the circulatory system.
the heart race is effect on the
the scientific name for the bleeding heart tetra fish is Hyphessobrycon erythrostigma
An empirical question is a question that can be answered through observation, measurement, and evidence. It deals with objective facts or phenomena that can be tested or studied using scientific methods. Examples of empirical questions include "What is the effect of exercise on heart rate?" or "Does smoking lead to an increased risk of lung cancer?"
The scientific name for heart failure is "congestive heart failure" or "cardiac failure." It is a condition where the heart is unable to pump blood effectively to meet the body's needs.
"cardiac"
Heart diseases
decreases the heart rate
Effect
"no! the liver!" heart tissue is damaged.
Calcium has no effect on heart rate. It does, however, have an effect on how hard the heart squeezes (inotropic effect). Heart rate is effected by the slow sodium channels in the pacemaker cells in the right atrium (and other pacemaker cells if the SA node is malfunctioning).