The respiration rate is your breathing rate and your pulse rate is your heart beat.
I would check the heart and respiration rates separately to make sure you are accurate. Especially dealing with babies. Use a stethoscope to check the heart rate and just count the time their chest rises and falls for respiration rate.
Higher than normal 20 with 60 heart rate
the brain stem is what controlls the heart rate, respiration and such.
To have a high rate of respiration requires a high blood flow to distribute the oxygen to the tissues, this increases the heart rate it also increasing the blood flow to the tissues.
The answer is quite simple. To have a high rate of respiration requires a high blood flow to distribute the oxygen to the tissues. Increasing heart rate is one means of increasing the blood flow to the tissues. The other means in increasing the amount of blood that is from the left ventricle with each contraction.
You can show you are releasing energy during respiration by measuring your heart rate and breathing rate. As your cells release energy through respiration, your heart rate and breathing rate will increase to deliver oxygen to your cells more efficiently. This is known as aerobic respiration, which produces ATP (energy) for your body's functions.
there are none
The medulla oblongata, located in the brainstem, controls breathing, heart rate, and respiration. It regulates these vital functions automatically without conscious effort.
Anaerobic respiration will vary with the individual. It is usually for 50% to 85% of a bodies maximum heart rate. This rate is considered to be around 150-180 depending on age, gender and fitness level.
For a healthy adult: heart rate of 60-100 beats/minute, respiratory rate of 12-20 breaths/minute
A drug that lowers heart rate and respiration is a barbituate.