Yes, a heart pacemaker can help regulate both low and high heartbeats. It is primarily used to treat bradycardia, a condition characterized by an abnormally slow heart rate, by delivering electrical impulses to stimulate the heart. Some advanced pacemakers also have functions to manage tachycardia, which is an abnormally fast heart rate, by adjusting pacing as needed. Overall, pacemakers help maintain a normal heart rhythm.
There isn't any "usual" heart beats for a female vs. a male fetus. All fetuses have extremely high heart rates.
Hummingbird's heart rate can reach as high as 1,260 beats per minute.
Heart Go crazy on you
No, it is not high.
If a person is on pacemaker how will high altitude affect him?
A chipmunk's heart beats at a rate of approximately 350 to 540 beats per minute. This fast heart rate helps to support their high metabolism and active lifestyle.
I just took my heart beat, is 102. High and I am sitting down on the computer. My doctor said that my heart is a little enlarged that's why my heart beat is high due to the heart working overtime. They suggested to have a pacemaker that is totally harmless but improve the heart beat to its regular normal beating. So I guess I am going though it sometimes next week. I am not saying everyone with a 102 heart beat need a pacemaker, I had a tripple by-pass surgery 3 years ago, and my heart is getting weak, so a pacemaker my just do the trick.
A fit person's heart rate is usually closer to 70 beats per minute. 94 is high.
It might be a little high but not dangerously high.
Hummingbirds are one of the smallest birds on earth. They eat a nectar of sugar and water when fed by humans. Their heart rate is typically 50 to 180 beats although it can be as fast 1260 beats. The wings beat at a rate of 10 to 15 beats a second.
Yes there absolutely is. To put it in it's most basic terms, the heart has electricity running through it. When you get an EKG at the cardiologists office, those lines are measures of the electrical activity of the heart. The pacemaker fires an electrical impulse when it detects that heart did not fire an electrical impulse on its own. By adding electricity via electrical muscle stimulation, you will run the very high risk of confusing the pacemaker. Just don't do it.
It causes high blood pressure, and in heavy use a condition called caridomropathy occurs where the heart muscle becomes destroyed resulting in irregular heart beats, high pulse rate, heart disease or even heart failure's.