Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Resting heart rate is important health indicator

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Aug, 2021 02:21 PM
  • Resting heart rate is important health indicator

According to data published by the World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization this year, long working hours, that is working 55 or more hours per week, is associated with a 17 per cent higher risk of dying from ischemic heart disease, compared to working 35-40 hours a week. Your lifestyle, therefore, has a direct bearing on your heart health and quality of life.

According to Rahul Singhal, Senior Electrophysiologist and Cardiologist in Jaipur, resting heart rate (RHR) is a vital indicator of your present and future health, and if mapped properly and often, can detect abnormalities early on. The process to check your resting heart rate, the doctor explains, is very simple. Put two fingers on your pulse for 60 seconds and count the heartbeats.

The pulse rate can be read any day of the week, but at that time of the reading, you should not be in stress or anxiety because in this situation the heart rate becomes high. Make sure you wait for at least five to ten after strenuous activity. It is best to check it first thing in the morning.

"Normally the heart rate is between 60 and 100. But if the heart rate is above 80 in a pulse reading of 60 seconds, then your risk of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and cardiovascular disease increases twice. If it is above 90, the risk of all these hazards increases by three times. Experts consider a beat between 70 and 80 as the ideal resting heart rate."

High resting heart rate means low physical fitness, says Singhal.

A heart rate between 60 and 100 is normal, but a heart rate above 80 is considered a high resting heart rate. It indicates your low physical fitness, overweight or fat or blood pressure. The higher the patient's resting heart rate, the greater the risk of heart disease or premature death. This is because the higher the heart rate, the more pumping the heart has to do.

"While it is good to get your heart rate up during exercising, it is not the same thing as a high resting heart rate. When at rest, the pulse reading should not be too high, or it is an indication that your heart muscles are under duress."

Due to the high pressure, the muscles of the heart get stressed, which can cause all these problems to the patient. One can stabilise a high resting heart rate by improving lifestyle, meditation, and yoga. Moreover, stress is a silent killer that can take your heart rate shooting through the roof. There have also been studies in which patients have normalised their high resting heart rate in just one week with lifestyle modification.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

The Bitter Truth Behind Sweets

The Bitter Truth Behind Sweets
Most of all, South Asian sweets are embedded in the very essence of festivals – in the capacity of a dessert and even as an exchange of gifts between families. 

The Bitter Truth Behind Sweets

Fitness Resolutions For the New Year 2021

Fitness Resolutions For the New Year 2021
Now seems like a great time to take a look at some potential fitness-related New Year’s resolutions that will help make the most of the year to come. 

Fitness Resolutions For the New Year 2021

Hospitals can care for Medicare patients at home in pandemic

Hospitals can care for Medicare patients at home in pandemic
Some hospitals already offered patients with private insurance the choice of getting care at home instead of in the hospital. The pandemic dramatically boosted use of such programs.

Hospitals can care for Medicare patients at home in pandemic

Canadians gaining weight during COVID-19: poll

Canadians gaining weight during COVID-19: poll
Nearly one-third of respondents in the survey conducted by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies said they have put on weight since March, compared to 15 per cent who said they lost weight over that time.

Canadians gaining weight during COVID-19: poll

Loblaw expands launch of health and wellness app

Loblaw expands launch of health and wellness app
The grocery and pharmacy retailer said Monday it's making the PC Health app available to download in Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta after an initial roll out in Atlantic Canada last month.

Loblaw expands launch of health and wellness app

Study links death to alcohol-related ER visits

Study links death to alcohol-related ER visits
More than two-thirds of those with five or more visits were male, almost half were aged 45 to 64 years, and nearly 90 per cent lived in urban centres, with 40 per cent of those coming from the lowest-income neighbourhoods.

Study links death to alcohol-related ER visits