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Heart rate
- To determine your maximum heart rate, subtract your age from 220. This number represents how many times your heart should beat per minute at its maximum ...
- ... your caregiver will closely monitor your blood pressure, heart rate, and your baby's heart rate. ... by continuously monitoring your blood pressure and his heart rate.
- ... or fluid-filled (congestive heart failure) Problems with heart rate or rhythm (arrhythmias) Excessive work load on heart that interferes with breathing, feeding, or sleeping
- ... are pain, distention of the abdomen, fever, rapid heart rate, and dehydration. This is a life-threatening complication ...
- ... electrical activity of the heart. A normal resting heart rate is 60 to 100 beats per minute.
- Ventricular tachycardia is a rapid resting heart rate initiated within the ventricles, typically at 160 to 240 beats per minute (normal resting rate is 60 to 100 beats per minute).
- Physical activity contributes to health by reducing the heart rate, decreasing the risk for cardiovascular disease, and reducing ...
- ... a refilling of the heart chamber. To determine heart rate, one counts the beats at a pulse point ...
- An apnea monitor checks the heart rate and respiration of the baby to make sure they are breathing properly. When either one falls below normal levels the apnea ...
- ... during the reading. Your oxygen saturation level and heart rate will appear on a small screen on the ...