The respiratory centers that control your rate of breathing are in the brainstem or medulla.
Specialized nerve cells within the aorta and carotid arteries called peripheral chemoreceptors monitor the oxygen concentration of the blood and feed back on the respiratory centers.
Peripheral chemoreceptors also monitor the carbon dioxide concentration in the blood. In addition, a central chemoreceptor in the medulla monitors the carbon dioxide concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that surrounds the brain and spinal cord; carbon dioxide diffuses easily into the CSF from the blood.
If the carbon dioxide concentration gets too high, then both types of chemoreceptors signal the respiratory centers to increase the rate and depth of breathing. The peripheral and central chemoreceptors are also sensitive to the pH of the blood and CSF.
brain stem
The brain controls vital functions such as breathing, heart rate, and temperature regulation through the autonomic nervous system. It also regulates hormones that help maintain homeostasis in the body. The brain continuously monitors and responds to changes in the environment to keep us alive and functioning optimally.
the brain stem is small part of the brain and the most important one because it keeps you breathing,keep your heart beating and also keep food moving through your digestive system.
no that's a good question u take a DEEP BREATH when u think about it
That he likes you, and you have his heart.
The adrenal medulla is the part of the brain that keeps the heart beating
The brain keeps the blood flow (a.k.a the heart) pumping, and that not to mention the other organs that require the brain to keep them go'in.
The brain stem, which consists of the midbrain, pons, and medulla, ot medulla oblongata - which keeps you breathing and your heart beating in proper rhythm. If your heat needs to slow down the heart is influenced by via cranial nerve X, the Vagus nerve.
when you have to use the bathroom the brain from the nervous system let you know that you need the loo The cardiovascular system interacts with the nervous system because the nervous system directs the heart and "tells it to beat". Brain and spinal cord send messages to the heart The brain sends electrical impulses telling the heart to pump and the heart when you are born involuntarily keeps pumping unless you're knocked out conscious and not breathing, dead for a while or you got your heart ripped out. But I doubt you would any of these to happen to you.
The major subdivisions of the brain are the cerebrum, cerebellum, and brainstem. The cerebrum is responsible for higher brain functions such as thinking and voluntary movement, the cerebellum coordinates movement and balance, and the brainstem controls basic life functions like breathing and heart rate.
well this is the obvious it keeps us alive and living and supplys blood to our brain
Your brain is what sends signals to your body telling it what to do. Your brain is always active, even when your sleeping