Top answers from doctors based on your search:
Whats the lowest your heart rate should be
A 42-year-old member asked:

Dr. Troy Reynaanswered
Pediatric Surgery 45 years experience
Depends: A lot depends on the age of the child. The younger the child the higher the heart rate. 0-1 years, 100-120. 1-5 yrs, 90-110. 5-12yrs , 60-90. 12-adult... Read More
5.5k viewsReviewed >2 years ago

Dr. Sarosh Batlivalaanswered
Pediatric Cardiology 17 years experience
Varies: Resting heart rates vary based on the age of a child. Please see the MedLine table at: https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/003399.htm.
667 viewsAnswered >2 years ago

Dr. Christopher Abelanswered
Pediatrics 27 years experience
Depends on their age: Generally speaking, the younger a child/infant is, the quicker their heart rate is.
5.5k viewsAnswered >2 years agoMerged
A 36-year-old member asked:

Dr. Terrence Cohenanswered
Cardiology 47 years experience
What type of work?: What type of work? The heart rate depends on many factors including conditioning, activity and stress level, disease state, mediations, etc. The stand... Read More
5.5k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 20-year-old member asked:

Dr. Louis Grenzeranswered
Cardiology 56 years experience
Varies: There is no specific dangerous heart rate during exercise. How fast your heart beats with exercise depends on a number of factors, especially your con... Read More
6.1k viewsReviewed >2 years ago

Dr. Sergio Schabelmananswered
Cardiology 49 years experience
Depends on your age: "NormaL" Maximun heart rate is 220 minus your age (220- 22 = 198) That is max. When under supervision (for stress test as an example), it is advisable... Read More
3.8k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 40-year-old male asked:

Dr. Boris Aronzonanswered
Anesthesiology 25 years experience
44-90: Depends on your level of endurance and intrasinc heart rate variability. 45-90 all can be good.
5.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 40-year-old member asked:

Dr. Michael Dansieanswered
Family Medicine 17 years experience
Depends: Supraventricular tachycardia often has abrupt rate changes often with the rate higher than sinus tachycardia
- infants > 220 bpm
- children > 180 bp... Read More
5.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 34-year-old male asked:

Dr. James Fergusonanswered
Pediatrics 47 years experience
Common: This is within the healthy range of normal.
48 viewsReviewed Sep 02, 2020
A 30-year-old member asked:

Dr. Donald Colantinoanswered
Internal Medicine 62 years experience
Supine: The heart works harder to circulate blood when you're lying flat rather than sitting up. It is more noticeable on first lying down but then slows in h... Read More
198 viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 46-year-old female asked:

Dr. Calvin Weisbergeranswered
52 years experience
Heart rate: We generally would not recommend reaching 200bpm with regular exercise. For a well 36y/o, a training rate of 150 - 160 would be more what we'd recomm... Read More
5.2k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 16-year-old female asked:

Dr. Dean Giannoneanswered
Internal Medicine 26 years experience
Normal heart rate.: At rest, assuming your heart rate is in normal sinus variety, your heart rate should be somewhere between 60 to 100 bpm, unless you are athletic in wh... Read More
519 viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 38-year-old member asked:

Dr. Bennett Werneranswered
Cardiology 45 years experience
Maybe: It's probably normal but your low diastolic pressure may be due to factitious reading, severe aortic regurgitation, av fistula, severe anemia, or thyr... Read More
4.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
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