Over the course of a fifteen minute run, your muscles need to release energy in order to move. This requires glucose, some of which is stored in the muscle cells, but much more has to be carried in the bloodstream. An increased bloodflow is also necessary to carry oxygen to the muscles (for aerobic respiration), and to remove carbon dioxide, which builds up (as a result of aerobic respiration too). This means your breathing rate increases as you need to inhale/exhale more gas, and your heart rate increases also to transport substances to and from the muscles quickly. You may sweat as well, as heat is produced as an inevitable waste product of respiration.
During the bleep test, which is also known as the shuttle run test, the body experiences an increase in heart rate, breathing rate, and oxygen consumption as the intensity of the exercise gradually increases. Muscles are engaged to run back and forth between markers, leading to fatigue as the test progresses. The body works to adapt to the increasing demand for energy production until exhaustion or the test is completed.
same thing that happens to eveyone you retards
Everything will run out of energy without an energy source.
your blood pressure rises
They are expelled from the body via exhalation.
nothign
They contract and release to move your body
your heart beats faster to get the blood pumping around your body
You get really sick! You can also get a headache, feel sick to the stomach, run a fever, and get chills.
when you are wet the electric currents run through your body causing it to shut down everything in body in atleast 2mins.Then when you are not wet you fry in 5mins.
Enzymes can not function well at higher tempatures so they become denatured and their body functions are not able to stay normal.
what happens if our body had no ligaments
AnswerIt is because the running is caused by the nerves endings. This happens when the brain is suddenly disconnected from the rest of the body.
What happens in our body when we have an infectious disease
what happens in you body when you have infectious disease
During the bleep test, which is also known as the shuttle run test, the body experiences an increase in heart rate, breathing rate, and oxygen consumption as the intensity of the exercise gradually increases. Muscles are engaged to run back and forth between markers, leading to fatigue as the test progresses. The body works to adapt to the increasing demand for energy production until exhaustion or the test is completed.
it most likely will run away or run you over