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In 2020 at the beginning of Covid,I felt short of breath and walked up the hill to the clinic. After sitting waiting about 10 minutes for the nurse, she said my pulse rate was 144/minute. I was 79. Your formula says my max rate is 131. I didn't have Covid, or any chest pain or any feeling of heart racing. Right now my pulse is 67/minute.
The fact that you’re still using an iPhone 6s generation iPhone, I’m not exactly taking your digital is less convenient than writing it down solution. It doesn’t exactly appear like your text savvy person and thus you wouldn’t be a good judge.
It's insane to think about a heart going at 310 a minute. I've had a heart beat of about 175-180 and I thought I was gonna die any second. Edit: just to clarify to everyone ive had 2 major heart surgeries I don't wanna test the waters to much lol.
180-190 was my heart beat when i first started running, not the whole run but evertime when it was slowly getting extremly hard :D Yeah but i had it one time without sport and it was not funny, ok i know from where it came, because i was dumb in my youth and mixed a few substances wich should not be mixed and that got me into a panic attack or something like that and i thought the whole time that i get a heart attack any minute, or that i already got one because i had chestpain too, not cool and i've learned about my mistakes, but yeah like i said that was already extremly scary but to get a hear rate off 300 must be hard, i mean it is so fast you could not really count it if you would try to messure it with your finger or so.
Lol I get that every time I go for a strenuous uphill hike. But yeah, I noticed that the moment I pass 180 I start feeling like I'm dying/need to lay down.
@@kuessebrama Same here! There was one time where it reached 196 or 197 bpm and I had to slow down and perform a Valsalva maneuver so I didn’t have my heart explode
@@benvanzon3234 I managed to hit 240 BUT I have severe dysautonomia and it was secondary SVT, unfortunately because it is caused by my brainstem jacking up my heart rate so defibrillation and typical meds to reverse SVT have no effect on me. Luckily, IV routed metroprolol, a dose of IV routed opiate and a dose propofol can help (depressing communication between the brainstem and heart as the three drugs are nervous system depressants and combining them just means a stay in an ICU).
Higher heart rates are like higher rpms in a car engine. Higher rpm, harder to get air into the engine to mix with fuel, so it makes less power, and there is a sweet spot in the speed range where peak power is reached, just like the heart. Higher bpm means less blood can enter the chambers of the heart, so less is pumped around, and there's a sweet spot of bpm where the heart is pumping the maximum amount of blood.
I have psvt(Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia), that extra pathway for electricity. I didn't experience symptoms until my early 20's. The highest bpm I ever recorded during an episode was 237 bpm, but I don't doubt I've reached higher than that. At this point, I'm pretty good at getting it to go back to a normal rythym, usually within about 15 minutes. If I'm unable to get it to stop within an hour, it's time for the er. Last time I had to go they injected me with adenosine, it makes your heart completely stop for about a second, then it kicks in again at a normal rythym, ideally. What a terrifying feeling that was.
Oh gosh. I have just plain SVT, and luckily it was about 90% cleared up with a catheter ablation. The most I experience now is an occasional skipped beat, but before the surgery it did some absolutely wacky shit.
I can imagine 😔 I feel sorry for every people who got somekind of heart problem. It's one of the two main organs if we don't count the respertory System My story:In my family, on both branch of it, one of my grandparent got at least one heart attack. My dad's dad even got 6 heart attacks. I don't really know genetics but I know that 1+1=~1 in genes so there's a big chance that I'll get one too
@@SakiMcGee I've been offered an ablation procedure, but I'm hesitant to do any surgery much less one involving my heart. My plan is if I ever get to the point that it's uncontrollable, then I'll get it done. So far so good. I probably get maybe 2 to 3 episodes a year, but it's manageable. Even my Dr said as long as I can get it to go back to normal fairly quickly it doesn't pose a health risk to me. It's the prolonged over-pumping for an hour or more that causes damage.
its too real i was having a panic attack and my heart was like watch this shi and proceeded to beat 150 times per minute. That walk of shame when the doctors told me im fine hit different
Pro Tip: When you get an electric shock, the frequency is key for being unable to let go and disrupting your heart rhythm, high frequencies burn instead of zap. It has something to do on how fast can muscle fibers polarize. Also what determine how hurt you would be is the total energy(Volts x Amps x Time), that's why you don't die by static shocks like when you touch a Van der Graaf generator
Yeah very high frequencies are going to act like DC and the normal house frequencie so 50/60 hertz, depends on where you life will be more dangerous for the heart.
Styropyro has an excellent video on all the factors that play into the dangers of electricity. It's one of the more recent ones. He covers the frequency argument and so much more. Highly recommend.
One of my friends, who has a lotttttt of birth defects and general health issues likely due to their bloodline being absolutely screwed by massive agent orange exposure, had a resting heart rate of like 140 bpm for a while. They really freaked out the high school gym teacher with it one time lol
I've been in the 180-200 heartbeat range before, and knowing that at times I was less than 15 more BPS from the maximum scares me. Not how close I got to the maximum, but how fine I felt. Granted, it hasn't happened to me in some time, but I remember being in the middle of a game and suddenly my fit bit is having a seizure trying to tell me to stop whatever the heck I was doing and sit down even though I felt completely fine.
fitbits are not very reliable especially when you are moving, to measure your heart rate accurately while moving you'd need sensors attached to your chest
This is a 1 year old comment but you do realise this is completely normal and healthy? For example, most people who regularly run/cycle and are doing intervals will get into that range every week, probs 2× a week for more than a few minutes at a time.
At the end of an all-out running workout, my heart rate peaks at 210 with an average of 195. My resting heart rate is 70, but jumps up quickly when I start running. I feel fine most of the time in my breathing and muscles though so I don't believe my heart rate to be an issue. I feel like it is due to me starting to run again after an injury, and the heat. On easy runs my average is around 175.
A fun little note I learned from my welding safety classes, it's specifically AC current that makes your muscles contract uncontrollably. It's because of the rapidly oscillating current that confuses your muscles. Direct current, while still dangerous, doesn't cause your muscles to contract (or at least not as bad, never say never and all that)
What? No it's the complete reverse, the DC will make your muscle clamp so hard that you will not be able to release it, the AC however, since it has to cross a 0V somewhere and go negative, it will make your muscle short of a "vibrating" feel and theoretically is easier to release
@@pierreuntel1970 I wasn't trying to say that DC can't cause your muscles to contract at all, if that's what you thought. It's just that usually a DC shock yields one large muscle contraction, often times away from the source. AC shocks, on the other hand, cause multiple smaller contractions, that create muscles spasms that make it harder to control the muscles
That isn't true at all, I used to work in power generation and one of my coworkers was once severely injured by accidentally laying his arm across a bus bar carrying over 500 VDC and the resulting contraction of the arm muscles was so strong that it dislocated his shoulder, and tore muscle/ligament tissue. Whoever told you that DC doesn't cause contractions is dead wrong and giving you very dangerous "advice".
As a professional athlete, I can easily go up to 180bpm and maintain it for an hour or so. But I’ve also reached around 205 and I’m sure I could go up even higher, it’s just the mentality that keeps me from giving everything. Amazing what wonders the human body can achieve!
I’m not a pro but I’ve been a top state rower for a few years. Totally agree with you on the 180 bpm and up point, most of my workouts are 170-190 and are 60-90 mins and sprints get into the 200s. My max I ever clocked was 218 during a fitness test and I don’t think I can get any higher lol
@@colin_henry1 ayyy another uni rower, yeah I’ve chest monitored at like 213 before during the last sprint in a 2k so I’m not sure if this theoretical limit really works
I was treadmill tested to show a maximum heart rate of 178/minute but typically during social running it was much lower than that. While in my mid 30s. At present with heart disease (left ventricular hypertrophy and atrial fibrillation) holter monitor reached 158 per minute upon trying for maximum and resting rate fell to 38 presumably during sleep/night.
I had my heart at 216 bpm once when i was 17 because i forced myself to run as fast as i could for as long as i could sustain it on a treadmill that was reading my heart rate. i was so lightheaded afterwards i just sat down for the next ten minutes and never tried it again. it was actually a pretty scary feeling.
2:40 the blood doesn't only pool into the atria during the joint diastole rather it leaks from the atria into the ventricles as the valves are open infact the maximum filling of ventricles happens during this passive pooling of the blood the atrial contraction only increases the blood flow by 30%
I used to do track, mountain biking, and weight training. I had frequent full tests of capabilities. Over 230- 247, was possible for sustained periods of less than 5 minutes, 217 for long periods over 30 minutes to an hour. 180 almost indefinitely. This was up until about age 30. At age 40, 160 seems to be my new 217, 180 beats my former 237, and 150 indefinite. At 145, I am loafing. Your body adapts to whatever you throw at it.
As someone with PITS, this video and your adrenalin video are great. Daily, POTS patients experience well over 150 - 200 beats per minute, just because we stand up. Ypur adrenalin vid helped explain how beta blockers help us. Thanks 😊
SAME I have POTS and I’m an athlete. The highest my heart has ever gotten is 210, almost 16 above my max BPM. And I reach 210 regularly. I am probably putting INTENSE strain on my cardiac muscles 😭
I was actually born with WPW Syndrome but it didn't become an issue until I was 2 month old in 1982. As a baby my heart rate could reach 300BPM and as I got older it could reach 200BPM. I had it corrected in 1997 when a new much simpler method became a thing that involved a 6-8 surgery of 4 catheters which were cameras and a 5th one that basically burned the extra path causing the problem. While that pretty much solved my problem, I still have an elevated heart rate of usually somewhere between 85-100BPM even resting and occasionally I experience sudden Tachycardia where my heart rate will go to over 100BPM. The worst thing about having WPW Syndrome is theres still a possibility it can return at a later age even after being corrected and ones who have the extra pathway on the left side are at a higher risk of complications during corrective surgery and a higher risk of it returning and lucky for me my problem was on the left side. Nowadays technology has advaced greatly and correcting it is not nearly as invasive as it was in the 1990's.
At 50 I started using a timex watch with a chest band to guage my range workouts. Using a tabata interval, HIIT, I Measured 171 bpm. 6 months later i could routinely hit 194 bpm doing tabata intervals after my regular run or weight training days. According to the 220 - age my max hr would be suggested as 170. I still do triathalon training and my resting hr is in the mid 40's.
When I am doing really hard fitness, my heartbeat has gone to 206 and 207 couple times(Apple Watch measurement) which I find interesting. Last year I was not as fit and the very max I was able to go was around 196
As teenager age of 15 I ran 1 hour very long and my heart went to 238 bpm and I felt like I was about to pass out a soul heart that will slap me for exercising too much
I went and asked ChatGPT (4o model) for terms relating to this phenomenon, as I experience the same thing very often, and have always been curious about this. Here are it's answers (without the descriptions that ChatGPT gave me): 1. Vicarious Pain 2. Mirror-Touch Synesthesia 3. Somatic Symptom Disorder 4. Somatosensory Amplification 5. Nocebo Effect 6. Hematophobia (or Blood-Injury Phobia) 7. Visceral Reactions In my opinion none of these describe this exact feeling/phenomenon... And it also seems that this topic just hasen't been studied, like, at all... But one more term that's useful here is "health anxiety". Anxiety about your own health could be triggered by watching content about medical topics. If these feelings start to bother you, I would recommend trying to consciously relax your body while watching medical videos, and to repeat in your mind, that you are fine, and that it is normal to feel what you feel, and that it will go away slowly. I hope you can still feed your curiosities about medicine, because it's a very interesting and useful topic!
When I was younger (late 20's) and extremely fit (single sculling 15 miles twice a day etc) on interval training on the rowing machine I managed to push my pulse rate up to 240-245 for 30 seconds at a time on several occasions. This was measured with a proper pulse rate meter. You are really wiped out by the end of that training but it sure as hell increases your lactic acid tolerance! Just for reference I had trained to the point of getting my resting pulse rate down to under 49BPM
I have a weird not yet identified condition where my normal resting heart rate is 110-120 which is tachycardia. Sometimes it may be at around 90 which is considered normal. Now the weird part is that, sometimes it decides to drop drastically, reaching at it's lowest 42 BPM (Has reached 30 during sleep, though). It's most common during emotional stressors but may also occur for no reason. I usually begin to feel a sudden sense of calm and comfort and becoming insanely sleepy, and I often enter some weird stage between conscious and unconscious. A few times I've completely blacked out, other times I retain the ability to hear but become unable to move, sometimes I enter a hypnagogic stage where I retain awareness of my surroundings but have dreams that somehow occurs simultaneously, and sometimes I will in some weird way be able to remember and understand what people say after I've "woken up" despite not understanding my surroundings at the time. Even if there is a strong correlation between my heart rate and this weird sleepiness, my heart rate weirdly enough doesn't always seem to slow down during these things. A couple of times I have retained a heart rate of 110 BPM despite being so sleepy I had to rest my head on the table. I underwent a cardiac ultra sound recently as my doctors were alarmed by the symptoms, and weirdly enough no abnormalities of the heart muscle were detected. Interestingly though, the cardiologist noted that my heart seems to be abnormally reactive to signals from the nervous system, noting how I apparently went from lying down with a heart rate of 90 BPM to entering tachycardia at 130 BPM simply by him entering the room, and it's not like I was scared or startled or anything, I just felt a little bit nervous.
I've survived briefly maxing out around 225 bpm. Turns out, if you try to do a speed based workout in the heat a day after donating blood, your heart has to work MUCH harder than it normally would.
Last year i messured 220 bpm by running for an entry in crime analitics facult. I was 20 and it was 30 plus celsius outside. Nailed the entry tho. Havent even worked out for it.
When I quit smoking a year ago, my resting HR slower down so much that I thought I had a heart issue as I sometimes felt as it was stopping. Despite me working out and running a lot, my resting HR was about 85 BPM. Two days after quitting or so, it went down to like 65 and it felt so weird until I got used to it.
I think it also depends on how active you are. I'm 17 so my theoretical maximum HR should be 193, but I've clocked it go as high as 210 or 220 before during extremely intense exercise (it probably also matters what kind of activity you do. I'm a competitive swimmer, so my workout regimens involve extended periods of high intensity cardio, during which I specifically target certain heart rates and try to hold them for several minutes. This has probably conditioned my heart to be able to beat faster than normal, while also not losing any efficiency or blood flow)
@@plsm7514 The slower your RESTING heart rate will be. In my case, I have a target heart rate that I'm trying to reach (say, 180) and I exercise in a way where I sustain this heart rate for long periods of time. This not only makes my heart more efficient and therefore my resting heart rate slower, but also strengthens my heart so that it can beat faster without losing efficiency. This allows me to significantly increase how much effort I can sustain in a race (I'm a swimmer btw)
I'm 54 and my heart rate hits 210 regularly with a recent Parkrun HR of 192 average throughout; to be honest, I was utterly pushing it and thought I was gonna die! Been an athlete since 14 so I really think my heart is probably ok 😊
@@goku445 dont be retarded, i work as a cardiac EKG SPECIALIST and metabolite internist....yes people die all the time!!! just from even climbing 1 story of stairs...
@@goku445 But she could have a subtle condition making her heart beat dangerously fast, a lot of athletes have ended up with some kind of heart problem even though they're active
Thank you so much for the video! I actually never thought about this question, but it was interesting to get a response to it. Your channel is the best, thank you so much!
I’m 22 and love running. When I was in shape at 16 running around 40-50 miles a week for two years straight my heart rate couldn’t go above 180 now at 22 out of shape I measure my hr on my Apple Watch and a treadmill bpm counter to hit 210 but I can’t hold it for more than a minute I talked to my doctor and have had multiple heart studies and everything is healthy. They say that the max numbers are theoretical and vary amongst people. If I can get it to 210 during exercise then that’s fine just be careful staying up there for too long.
As far as I've ever heard, the formula for maximum heart rate is general and not totally agreed upon. When I was in grade school I was told to use the formula 220-age. More recently I've heard a better formula is 205-0.5×age.
Did this formula and I'd say I'd agree. Was training once and I hit the bpm I got with this formula and it was the highest I've ever hit. I literally felt like I couldn't go more than that.
Having been born with Wolfe Parkinson White - although I did not know it until just after I hit 30 and had my first WPW attack, I found this interesting. I happened to be at a Doctor's house when it happened. My pulse was so fast that neither he nor I could count it, but we estimated that my pulse was 350 - 400 bpm. By the time I was on an ECG, both of us knew that my pulse had dropped substantially and I still have that ECK printout at 213 bpm. This was 1989 and it was open heart surgery to fix it so I was put onto meds that controlled it for nine years when it happened again. By that time, the procedure was changed so the fix was a done with catheters. Took 22 minutes to fix it. I have not had a problem since. Thanks for this video.
God damn. When I got really, really sick my heart rate was resting around 180-200 or something. I was pretty out of it so the numbers may be off, but now I understand why the ER freaked the fuck out and thought I was going into septic shock. 210 being a maximum? I really didn’t realize how sick I really was.
I was on the treadmill, max I got was 234 bpm. I don't know if there is something wrong with me, I mention that I ran pretty hard to see how high my heart goes. When I saw 234 I slowed down to walking pace and I never felt like I die but I definitely I felt like my heart wanted to blow. When my beat went down to 200, I felt like I should fly not walk. Then the beat slowly declined to averaging at 140 still on the treadmill. I recently tested my idle heartbeat ( like when I'm sitting down and chilling ) and I got 49.
Same, I am 20 and my peak bpm recorded by my Apple Watch while boxing or my late (intense) stage of warm-up before boxing is about 202/203. During sleep it drops down to 55-48 bpm.
I'm 22 but my boy beats around 220 during cardio training, running or cycling for example. Sometimes higher, absolute max after intense sprinting for 10 minutes was 232. It felt ok, absolutely to problem. I was just hearing air in my ears like i'm yawning every breath for couple minutes, and was ready for another intense sprint just in 1 minute.
The scene from Home Alone 2 you showed still makes me laugh hysterically at 42 as it did when I was 10. I don't know why, I just love the gags in the 2nd one more.
I have a three heart conditions, SVT, AFIB, and Tachycardia. One time my heart rate got to just over 200. I’m now know as “the kid with the heart problem” on westpoint because the whole staff was called in incase I had a heart attack!
The wrong type of tachycardia can result in blood not flowing properly and then blood clots form. Any cell within the heart can transform into a group of cells similar to SA node or AV node resulting in extra heartbeats. A good way to detect this is to have an "EP study" (electrophysiology) performed which reveals malfunctioning areas of the heart from within. If a "bad" spot is found, a cardiologist may perform an ablation to convert the cells into scar tissue and terminate the superfluous electrical signals.
As a 15 year old my theoretical limit should be 195-205 bpm. I've had my watch record multiple heart rates over 200 bpm, 218 being the highest recorded by my watch. I do not have any heart diseases nor did i do any kind of exercise in that moment. I was actually very chill when that happened.
Suffered AVNRT, a form of SVT. Heart rate would go from resting 70bpm to 200bpm in a single beat. Drs brushed it off as panic attacks for a decade before one realized & rushed me in for an ablation
After having gone through three cancer episodes, the first one in 2012, I stopped doing my three mile "run" three times per week at age 63. I'm 74 now and thinking about trying to get back to doing thee miles a couple times per week. Going to start tomorrow gradually working my way up. I worried about my heart, but a stress test a few months ago showed I'm just fine. With a maximum heart rate of 136 (210-74), I'm certainly not going to break any records.
It's possible that there was artifacting due to the actual tremors I was dealing with, but I have POTS (a type of tachycardia), was experiencing chronic tachycardia, then on top of that was having very frequent seizures that put me in the ER, and the HR monitor was reading over 180 for a while, shot up above 210 (I forget if it was 216 or 226, because I was bordering on unconscious), then read "++" before falling back down into the 170-190 range (this part I have only somewhat lucid memory of, but it was corroborated by the people who went with me to the ER). I passed out right about then, so I wouldn't doubt that a brief spike into the 220+ range could have caused that. That being said, even 170+ makes me feel like absolute shit, so even if the heart can *mechanically* beat over 200 bpm in a young adult, I wouldn't say it can *functionally* beat that high, especially not for very long. I've slowly worked my resting HR down from ~110 a few years ago to ~88 now, so even in my tachycardia episodes, I'm typically "only" in the high 160s/low 170s nowadays.
A couple years back i had to go to the ER due to acute respiratory failure with hypoxia due to athsma. My RESTING heart rate was at 180bpm. Needless to say i was heavily monitored in the ICU for almost a week
Back when I had cancer when I was 12, about a year into treatment o was in hospital with an infection and I was hooked up to a machine during a routine check. At one point the monitor started screaming at my nurse and she decided to take my pulse manually. I saw this nurse who’d I’d seen many times over the past year and a bit have her colour drain from her face, my heart rate was In the low 300s. She sat there for a second and decided to take my heart rate again on the machine. It started dropping down to the 240s. She called in the doctors (but later told me if it didn’t drop so much in that couple minutes she’d have had to press the emergency alarm that alarms the entire ward and other doctors I’m the hospital). The next couple of days it stayed at 190 ish beats, whilst I spent the whole night in bed. She told me she didn’t believe it which is why she did it twice and took it manually on my pulse or something. I had to have ECGs, wires connected to my whole body for ages. Literally like the next day too I started having spasms in my muscle tissue all over my body and was in agony. I also ended up having mucousitis so that was fun. I’m glad I didn’t need the emergency button pushed because I already have diagnosed PTSD from everything, although now when I have PTSD reliving and flashbacks and memories, and my anxiety starts up- I can always feel my heart rate and I worry it’s happening again. Slay
As a kid, when I was 12/13 years old, I suffered from Tachycardia and my Max BPM ever (from 11 attacks in total) was 274.. Had two surgeries and been okay ever since. If you want to know what they do to stop an episode: make your heart stop. They inject adenosine, your heart stops for a couple seconds to "calm down" and in best case it starts normal again (at abt. 170).
Yooo, same here. Never actually seen/spoke to anyone that also had WPW. Happy to see all went well. Sometimes I panic about it ever returning whenever I get palpitations, but I have to keep in mind that it's most probably anxiety/stress/panic-attack induced, especially since I went through the operation while I was still young.
@@Ryno_YT Eyy nice to meet you!! Dw man I had the procedure when I was 11, and I'm going to turn 18 this year and I'm doing well, so I assure you won't have any problems!!!! I also have Ebstein anomaly, and with that I play football(or soccer if you're american lol) regularly. Don't think about it too much just enjoy your life like any other person would. Wish you a Happy and healthy life mate!!!
At 28 years of age my BPM was in excess of 300. My AV node was functioning like a 6 lane expressway instead of a 2 lane road according to my cardiologist. My form of surgery was in the experimental stage when performed 32 years ago. Thank heaven for Science!
My max heart rate is apparently 185 which is scary because I’ve had a heart rate of 190 bpm in the hospital. I forget what exactly was wrong with me but I manage it with medication now.
I was born with WPD (Wolf Parkinson Wyde). I did get to the 300+ limit a few times. I eventually got surgery for it, but it wasn't removed. Instead, they caturized the extra electrode.
When I was 16, my theoretical max heart rate was 194 bpm. I once had a workout where my heart rate reached above 220. At that point my heart started skipping beats every couple seconds. I didn’t have to go to the hospital or ER but I think I just got lucky. My heart rate dipped below 200 shortly after I stopped but it took about 10 minutes for it to go below 160. The worst symptoms were lightheadedness and a headache. Nothing like this happened since, most likely because I learned how to pace myself in my workouts.
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In 2020 at the beginning of Covid,I felt short of breath and walked up the hill to the clinic. After sitting waiting about 10 minutes for the nurse, she said my pulse rate was 144/minute. I was 79. Your formula says my max rate is 131. I didn't have Covid, or any chest pain or any feeling of heart racing. Right now my pulse is 67/minute.
The fact that you’re still using an iPhone 6s generation iPhone, I’m not exactly taking your digital is less convenient than writing it down solution. It doesn’t exactly appear like your text savvy person and thus you wouldn’t be a good judge.
It's insane to think about a heart going at 310 a minute. I've had a heart beat of about 175-180 and I thought I was gonna die any second.
Edit: just to clarify to everyone ive had 2 major heart surgeries I don't wanna test the waters to much lol.
180-190 was my heart beat when i first started running, not the whole run but evertime when it was slowly getting extremly hard :D Yeah but i had it one time without sport and it was not funny, ok i know from where it came, because i was dumb in my youth and mixed a few substances wich should not be mixed and that got me into a panic attack or something like that and i thought the whole time that i get a heart attack any minute, or that i already got one because i had chestpain too, not cool and i've learned about my mistakes, but yeah like i said that was already extremly scary but to get a hear rate off 300 must be hard, i mean it is so fast you could not really count it if you would try to messure it with your finger or so.
Lol I get that every time I go for a strenuous uphill hike. But yeah, I noticed that the moment I pass 180 I start feeling like I'm dying/need to lay down.
I managed to get it to 221 once, which was probably one of the dumbest things I've done, since I nearly passed out afterwards.
@@kuessebrama Same here! There was one time where it reached 196 or 197 bpm and I had to slow down and perform a Valsalva maneuver so I didn’t have my heart explode
@@benvanzon3234 I managed to hit 240 BUT I have severe dysautonomia and it was secondary SVT, unfortunately because it is caused by my brainstem jacking up my heart rate so defibrillation and typical meds to reverse SVT have no effect on me. Luckily, IV routed metroprolol, a dose of IV routed opiate and a dose propofol can help (depressing communication between the brainstem and heart as the three drugs are nervous system depressants and combining them just means a stay in an ICU).
Higher heart rates are like higher rpms in a car engine. Higher rpm, harder to get air into the engine to mix with fuel, so it makes less power, and there is a sweet spot in the speed range where peak power is reached, just like the heart. Higher bpm means less blood can enter the chambers of the heart, so less is pumped around, and there's a sweet spot of bpm where the heart is pumping the maximum amount of blood.
which is..?
@@mastershooter64 it depends on the engine
Lol? Higher rpm the more power obviously. Higher rpm the faster you go.
That’s when forced induction kicks in.
Except that heart has practically unlimited torgue, it doesn't get weaker in lower rpm/bpm
As a 210 year old, I'm proud to say my max heart rate is 0 bpm
when they gonna unplug the life support
@@randomtexanguy9563 NEVER lol, soon it will be in the negatives
What even would a negative heart rate be like? lmao
@@Riinkz God knows what that looks like🤷
@@Riinkz at 420 year old, your heart rate would roll over -210 and go back to 210, as if it never aged :)
I have psvt(Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia), that extra pathway for electricity. I didn't experience symptoms until my early 20's. The highest bpm I ever recorded during an episode was 237 bpm, but I don't doubt I've reached higher than that.
At this point, I'm pretty good at getting it to go back to a normal rythym, usually within about 15 minutes. If I'm unable to get it to stop within an hour, it's time for the er. Last time I had to go they injected me with adenosine, it makes your heart completely stop for about a second, then it kicks in again at a normal rythym, ideally. What a terrifying feeling that was.
Woah 😓
Oh gosh. I have just plain SVT, and luckily it was about 90% cleared up with a catheter ablation. The most I experience now is an occasional skipped beat, but before the surgery it did some absolutely wacky shit.
I can imagine 😔 I feel sorry for every people who got somekind of heart problem. It's one of the two main organs if we don't count the respertory System
My story:In my family, on both branch of it, one of my grandparent got at least one heart attack. My dad's dad even got 6 heart attacks. I don't really know genetics but I know that 1+1=~1 in genes so there's a big chance that I'll get one too
@@SakiMcGee I've been offered an ablation procedure, but I'm hesitant to do any surgery much less one involving my heart. My plan is if I ever get to the point that it's uncontrollable, then I'll get it done. So far so good. I probably get maybe 2 to 3 episodes a year, but it's manageable. Even my Dr said as long as I can get it to go back to normal fairly quickly it doesn't pose a health risk to me. It's the prolonged over-pumping for an hour or more that causes damage.
Sounds like when I see anyone even mildly attractive in a public setting
Heart:how fast should I beat?
Brain in stress:yes.
its too real i was having a panic attack and my heart was like watch this shi and proceeded to beat 150 times per minute. That walk of shame when the doctors told me im fine hit different
Pro Tip: When you get an electric shock, the frequency is key for being unable to let go and disrupting your heart rhythm, high frequencies burn instead of zap.
It has something to do on how fast can muscle fibers polarize.
Also what determine how hurt you would be is the total energy(Volts x Amps x Time), that's why you don't die by static shocks like when you touch a Van der Graaf generator
Yeah very high frequencies are going to act like DC and the normal house frequencie so 50/60 hertz, depends on where you life will be more dangerous for the heart.
And the path electricity goes through your body. If it goes through your heart, it's likely bye bye.
Styropyro has an excellent video on all the factors that play into the dangers of electricity. It's one of the more recent ones. He covers the frequency argument and so much more. Highly recommend.
@@Kwauhn. yup, electroboom too I think.
I'm 22, my theoretical limit is 188.
During a panic attack I had, the watch I was wearing recorded my heart rate peaked at 186.
Needless to say this entire video made me feel VERY anxious lmao
Eh, I'm 21 and reach 195 when I'm doing intense cardio like mountain hiking and sprinting. I always thought it was 220-age, not 210.
@@lukeheffernan its a very generalized metric. Fact of the matter is that +-20 bpm here and there aint that uncommon.
when you have panic attacks
the only thing you have to worry about is panic attacks ...
I'm almost 20 and during a panic attack it hit 202 according to my watch wth
One of my friends, who has a lotttttt of birth defects and general health issues likely due to their bloodline being absolutely screwed by massive agent orange exposure, had a resting heart rate of like 140 bpm for a while. They really freaked out the high school gym teacher with it one time lol
I once had a resting heart rate of 180bpm. I was having a heart attack.
😂 that’s wild
I started to have goosebumps especially in my heart area, whenever i see the heart and hear the sound.
I've been in the 180-200 heartbeat range before, and knowing that at times I was less than 15 more BPS from the maximum scares me. Not how close I got to the maximum, but how fine I felt. Granted, it hasn't happened to me in some time, but I remember being in the middle of a game and suddenly my fit bit is having a seizure trying to tell me to stop whatever the heck I was doing and sit down even though I felt completely fine.
Question what sort of game was this?
@@PurpleGengar822 Basketball
@@BPS298 got you. Thanks
fitbits are not very reliable especially when you are moving, to measure your heart rate accurately while moving you'd need sensors attached to your chest
This is a 1 year old comment but you do realise this is completely normal and healthy? For example, most people who regularly run/cycle and are doing intervals will get into that range every week, probs 2× a week for more than a few minutes at a time.
At the end of an all-out running workout, my heart rate peaks at 210 with an average of 195. My resting heart rate is 70, but jumps up quickly when I start running. I feel fine most of the time in my breathing and muscles though so I don't believe my heart rate to be an issue. I feel like it is due to me starting to run again after an injury, and the heat. On easy runs my average is around 175.
I am 15 right now so mine should be 195. After reading other comments, others experienced similar things. Glad to see that I am not alone.
Average 195 lmao. Cant be accurate
@kennethJohnson-du6bz lmao. Humans are designed to run but you think it's bad for us ? Go on...tell us what's so bad ?
A fun little note I learned from my welding safety classes, it's specifically AC current that makes your muscles contract uncontrollably. It's because of the rapidly oscillating current that confuses your muscles. Direct current, while still dangerous, doesn't cause your muscles to contract (or at least not as bad, never say never and all that)
What? No it's the complete reverse, the DC will make your muscle clamp so hard that you will not be able to release it, the AC however, since it has to cross a 0V somewhere and go negative, it will make your muscle short of a "vibrating" feel and theoretically is easier to release
@@pierreuntel1970 I wasn't trying to say that DC can't cause your muscles to contract at all, if that's what you thought. It's just that usually a DC shock yields one large muscle contraction, often times away from the source. AC shocks, on the other hand, cause multiple smaller contractions, that create muscles spasms that make it harder to control the muscles
@@DulcetCatharsis whatever a house is wired with is what I experienced easier to pull away from.
@@tkviewing4029
Thats ac, but what is the otger alternative?
That isn't true at all, I used to work in power generation and one of my coworkers was once severely injured by accidentally laying his arm across a bus bar carrying over 500 VDC and the resulting contraction of the arm muscles was so strong that it dislocated his shoulder, and tore muscle/ligament tissue. Whoever told you that DC doesn't cause contractions is dead wrong and giving you very dangerous "advice".
As a professional athlete, I can easily go up to 180bpm and maintain it for an hour or so. But I’ve also reached around 205 and I’m sure I could go up even higher, it’s just the mentality that keeps me from giving everything. Amazing what wonders the human body can achieve!
Now make your heart an MG 42
1500bpm
@@fuckinantipope5511 goddamn 😂
I’m not a pro but I’ve been a top state rower for a few years. Totally agree with you on the 180 bpm and up point, most of my workouts are 170-190 and are 60-90 mins and sprints get into the 200s. My max I ever clocked was 218 during a fitness test and I don’t think I can get any higher lol
@@colin_henry1 ayyy another uni rower, yeah I’ve chest monitored at like 213 before during the last sprint in a 2k so I’m not sure if this theoretical limit really works
I was treadmill tested to show a maximum heart rate of 178/minute but typically during social running it was much lower than that. While in my mid 30s.
At present with heart disease (left ventricular hypertrophy and atrial fibrillation) holter monitor reached 158 per minute upon trying for maximum and resting rate fell to 38 presumably during sleep/night.
For eons I have waited to see another video! Thank you, enjoyed it a lot
I had my heart at 216 bpm once when i was 17 because i forced myself to run as fast as i could for as long as i could sustain it on a treadmill that was reading my heart rate. i was so lightheaded afterwards i just sat down for the next ten minutes and never tried it again. it was actually a pretty scary feeling.
This sounds exactly like something I’d do out of curiosity lmao
2:40 the blood doesn't only pool into the atria during the joint diastole rather it leaks from the atria into the ventricles as the valves are open infact the maximum filling of ventricles happens during this passive pooling of the blood the atrial contraction only increases the blood flow by 30%
I used to do track, mountain biking, and weight training. I had frequent full tests of capabilities. Over 230- 247, was possible for sustained periods of less than 5 minutes, 217 for long periods over 30 minutes to an hour. 180 almost indefinitely. This was up until about age 30. At age 40, 160 seems to be my new 217, 180 beats my former 237, and 150 indefinite. At 145, I am loafing. Your body adapts to whatever you throw at it.
As someone with PITS, this video and your adrenalin video are great. Daily, POTS patients experience well over 150 - 200 beats per minute, just because we stand up. Ypur adrenalin vid helped explain how beta blockers help us. Thanks 😊
I've had a 150 bpm resting heart rate from borderline heatstroke before, took several hours for it to drop
SAME I have POTS and I’m an athlete. The highest my heart has ever gotten is 210, almost 16 above my max BPM. And I reach 210 regularly. I am probably putting INTENSE strain on my cardiac muscles 😭
I have a condition called SVT and today mine just reached above 220 so yea i feel you
I was actually born with WPW Syndrome but it didn't become an issue until I was 2 month old in 1982. As a baby my heart rate could reach 300BPM and as I got older it could reach 200BPM. I had it corrected in 1997 when a new much simpler method became a thing that involved a 6-8 surgery of 4 catheters which were cameras and a 5th one that basically burned the extra path causing the problem. While that pretty much solved my problem, I still have an elevated heart rate of usually somewhere between 85-100BPM even resting and occasionally I experience sudden Tachycardia where my heart rate will go to over 100BPM. The worst thing about having WPW Syndrome is theres still a possibility it can return at a later age even after being corrected and ones who have the extra pathway on the left side are at a higher risk of complications during corrective surgery and a higher risk of it returning and lucky for me my problem was on the left side. Nowadays technology has advaced greatly and correcting it is not nearly as invasive as it was in the 1990's.
At 50 I started using a timex watch with a chest band to guage my range workouts. Using a tabata interval, HIIT, I Measured 171 bpm. 6 months later i could routinely hit 194 bpm doing tabata intervals after my regular run or weight training days. According to the 220 - age my max hr would be suggested as 170. I still do triathalon training and my resting hr is in the mid 40's.
6:35"His heart was beating fast"
"And his skin is gray due to not enough blood"
(*confused onga bunga*)
7:45ah
Science always the best❤️
When I am doing really hard fitness, my heartbeat has gone to 206 and 207 couple times(Apple Watch measurement) which I find interesting. Last year I was not as fit and the very max I was able to go was around 196
That's cool to hear personal stories. Sorta holds up to the max 210-220 bpm theory
As teenager age of 15 I ran 1 hour very long and my heart went to 238 bpm and I felt like I was about to pass out a soul heart that will slap me for exercising too much
I AM OREGANO
Heart is a muscle, work it out! 🎉🎉🎉
Very informative and well edited 👍
Yep
Boomer comment ahead
@Anitamil Anitami y
Everytime I watch a medicine related video a part of my body hurts
I just learned this in class yesterday but not this détail
Me too; it’s strange.
I went and asked ChatGPT (4o model) for terms relating to this phenomenon, as I experience the same thing very often, and have always been curious about this.
Here are it's answers (without the descriptions that ChatGPT gave me):
1. Vicarious Pain
2. Mirror-Touch Synesthesia
3. Somatic Symptom Disorder
4. Somatosensory Amplification
5. Nocebo Effect
6. Hematophobia (or Blood-Injury Phobia)
7. Visceral Reactions
In my opinion none of these describe this exact feeling/phenomenon... And it also seems that this topic just hasen't been studied, like, at all...
But one more term that's useful here is "health anxiety". Anxiety about your own health could be triggered by watching content about medical topics.
If these feelings start to bother you, I would recommend trying to consciously relax your body while watching medical videos, and to repeat in your mind, that you are fine, and that it is normal to feel what you feel, and that it will go away slowly. I hope you can still feed your curiosities about medicine, because it's a very interesting and useful topic!
The heart beating outside the body is creepin’ me out. Great vid! :)
Thanks! 😁
Isn't nature awesome
ABOMATION
Oh yes, syncope from tachycardia. I know that all too well as I have POTS and had tachycardia quite a few times over 210. 260 is probably highest
7:21 I'm fairly certain nobody thinks like this at all.
When I was younger (late 20's) and extremely fit (single sculling 15 miles twice a day etc) on interval training on the rowing machine I managed to push my pulse rate up to 240-245 for 30 seconds at a time on several occasions. This was measured with a proper pulse rate meter. You are really wiped out by the end of that training but it sure as hell increases your lactic acid tolerance! Just for reference I had trained to the point of getting my resting pulse rate down to under 49BPM
nice. I bet you had the athletic heart syndrome.
I have a weird not yet identified condition where my normal resting heart rate is 110-120 which is tachycardia. Sometimes it may be at around 90 which is considered normal. Now the weird part is that, sometimes it decides to drop drastically, reaching at it's lowest 42 BPM (Has reached 30 during sleep, though). It's most common during emotional stressors but may also occur for no reason. I usually begin to feel a sudden sense of calm and comfort and becoming insanely sleepy, and I often enter some weird stage between conscious and unconscious. A few times I've completely blacked out, other times I retain the ability to hear but become unable to move, sometimes I enter a hypnagogic stage where I retain awareness of my surroundings but have dreams that somehow occurs simultaneously, and sometimes I will in some weird way be able to remember and understand what people say after I've "woken up" despite not understanding my surroundings at the time. Even if there is a strong correlation between my heart rate and this weird sleepiness, my heart rate weirdly enough doesn't always seem to slow down during these things. A couple of times I have retained a heart rate of 110 BPM despite being so sleepy I had to rest my head on the table. I underwent a cardiac ultra sound recently as my doctors were alarmed by the symptoms, and weirdly enough no abnormalities of the heart muscle were detected. Interestingly though, the cardiologist noted that my heart seems to be abnormally reactive to signals from the nervous system, noting how I apparently went from lying down with a heart rate of 90 BPM to entering tachycardia at 130 BPM simply by him entering the room, and it's not like I was scared or startled or anything, I just felt a little bit nervous.
Why is it whenever i watch a video about the heart i always become so self conscious about my own 🤣
You can feel your cloth.
You now feel your tongue.
I is itching somewhere.
You are now breathing manually.
@@GeneralFOPPA STOP
8:26 This music is gas af!🔥🔥
what a good guy. reminds me of old youtube. the good old days. thanks man
"Awwww babe. You just stole my heart! Please give it back I'm fucking dying"
I've survived briefly maxing out around 225 bpm.
Turns out, if you try to do a speed based workout in the heat a day after donating blood, your heart has to work MUCH harder than it normally would.
sounds like a recipe for disaster
( 8:19 )|Thank you, I am absolutely that kind of person.
my theoretical limit should be 192bpm but the first time i ran a 400m i measured my heartbeat after finishing and it was around 220
yes
Last year i messured 220 bpm by running for an entry in crime analitics facult. I was 20 and it was 30 plus celsius outside. Nailed the entry tho. Havent even worked out for it.
I really enjoy ur vids, they are thoroughly quite understandable, thanks
Thanks!
Me who runs cross country:
Look what they need to mimic a fraction of my power
*laughs in 45 bpm resting heart rate*
According to my watch my peak heart rate was 199 (21 years old) during a badminton match. I was severly exhausted afterwards
Was so happy to see a video that goes into A&P and not just some comedic video that may just lightly gloss over the heart chambers or muscles
When I quit smoking a year ago, my resting HR slower down so much that I thought I had a heart issue as I sometimes felt as it was stopping. Despite me working out and running a lot, my resting HR was about 85 BPM. Two days after quitting or so, it went down to like 65 and it felt so weird until I got used to it.
Unrelated to the topic but when you said "in theory" my phone thought I said "Hey Siri" LOL
I think it also depends on how active you are. I'm 17 so my theoretical maximum HR should be 193, but I've clocked it go as high as 210 or 220 before during extremely intense exercise (it probably also matters what kind of activity you do. I'm a competitive swimmer, so my workout regimens involve extended periods of high intensity cardio, during which I specifically target certain heart rates and try to hold them for several minutes. This has probably conditioned my heart to be able to beat faster than normal, while also not losing any efficiency or blood flow)
TIL heart is a muscle like any other
im a couchpotato and i also can reach 220.
its opposite the less cardio you do the faster it will be, the more conditioned you are the slower your heart rate will be
higher heart rate = unhealthier. lower heart rate = healthier
@@plsm7514 The slower your RESTING heart rate will be. In my case, I have a target heart rate that I'm trying to reach (say, 180) and I exercise in a way where I sustain this heart rate for long periods of time. This not only makes my heart more efficient and therefore my resting heart rate slower, but also strengthens my heart so that it can beat faster without losing efficiency. This allows me to significantly increase how much effort I can sustain in a race (I'm a swimmer btw)
Nothing makes a heart beat faster than messing up something in front of your crush
I'm 54 and my heart rate hits 210 regularly with a recent Parkrun HR of 192 average throughout; to be honest, I was utterly pushing it and thought I was gonna die! Been an athlete since 14 so I really think my heart is probably ok 😊
You need to be careful of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, classic case starts with exactly how you are approaching this.
no...its called pushing your luck..you will die, stay under 180 big boy
@@lunam7249 You don't die from pushing yourself physically unless you have a condition. Especially as an athlete.
@@goku445 dont be retarded, i work as a cardiac EKG SPECIALIST and metabolite internist....yes people die all the time!!! just from even climbing 1 story of stairs...
@@goku445 But she could have a subtle condition making her heart beat dangerously fast, a lot of athletes have ended up with some kind of heart problem even though they're active
Thank you so much for the video! I actually never thought about this question, but it was interesting to get a response to it. Your channel is the best, thank you so much!
Fun fact, when Neil Armstrong touched down on the Moon, his heart rate read approximately 156.
I’m 22 and love running. When I was in shape at 16 running around 40-50 miles a week for two years straight my heart rate couldn’t go above 180 now at 22 out of shape I measure my hr on my Apple Watch and a treadmill bpm counter to hit 210 but I can’t hold it for more than a minute I talked to my doctor and have had multiple heart studies and everything is healthy. They say that the max numbers are theoretical and vary amongst people. If I can get it to 210 during exercise then that’s fine just be careful staying up there for too long.
My highest recorded BPM since I started wearing a smart watch was 189, well over my theoretical limit.
Bro was beefing with Superman to have a heart rate of 480bpm
As far as I've ever heard, the formula for maximum heart rate is general and not totally agreed upon. When I was in grade school I was told to use the formula 220-age. More recently I've heard a better formula is 205-0.5×age.
Did this formula and I'd say I'd agree. Was training once and I hit the bpm I got with this formula and it was the highest I've ever hit. I literally felt like I couldn't go more than that.
Your videos are so fascinating and you have good animations. How do you not already have a million subscribers?
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
PP OF DEMONSHADE
Watching videos like this make my insides hurt
Having been born with Wolfe Parkinson White - although I did not know it until just after I hit 30 and had my first WPW attack, I found this interesting. I happened to be at a Doctor's house when it happened. My pulse was so fast that neither he nor I could count it, but we estimated that my pulse was 350 - 400 bpm. By the time I was on an ECG, both of us knew that my pulse had dropped substantially and I still have that ECK printout at 213 bpm. This was 1989 and it was open heart surgery to fix it so I was put onto meds that controlled it for nine years when it happened again. By that time, the procedure was changed so the fix was a done with
catheters. Took 22 minutes to fix it. I have not had a problem since.
Thanks for this video.
God damn. When I got really, really sick my heart rate was resting around 180-200 or something. I was pretty out of it so the numbers may be off, but now I understand why the ER freaked the fuck out and thought I was going into septic shock. 210 being a maximum? I really didn’t realize how sick I really was.
I was on the treadmill, max I got was 234 bpm. I don't know if there is something wrong with me, I mention that I ran pretty hard to see how high my heart goes. When I saw 234 I slowed down to walking pace and I never felt like I die but I definitely I felt like my heart wanted to blow. When my beat went down to 200, I felt like I should fly not walk. Then the beat slowly declined to averaging at 140 still on the treadmill. I recently tested my idle heartbeat ( like when I'm sitting down and chilling ) and I got 49.
I’ve been maxed out at 202bpm during an intense workout on my bike. I was insanely exhausted
Same, I am 20 and my peak bpm recorded by my Apple Watch while boxing or my late (intense) stage of warm-up before boxing is about 202/203. During sleep it drops down to 55-48 bpm.
"My brand!"
I died, I caught that, good stuff haha
I'm 22 but my boy beats around 220 during cardio training, running or cycling for example. Sometimes higher, absolute max after intense sprinting for 10 minutes was 232. It felt ok, absolutely to problem. I was just hearing air in my ears like i'm yawning every breath for couple minutes, and was ready for another intense sprint just in 1 minute.
Thank-you heart, you've done a lot for us
Woah, didn't even think that fast heart beat is even possible. Interesting vid
The scene from Home Alone 2 you showed still makes me laugh hysterically at 42 as it did when I was 10. I don't know why, I just love the gags in the 2nd one more.
I have a three heart conditions, SVT, AFIB, and Tachycardia. One time my heart rate got to just over 200. I’m now know as “the kid with the heart problem” on westpoint because the whole staff was called in incase I had a heart attack!
I have SVT and my highest recorded heart rate was 194bpm. This was when I was 29
The wrong type of tachycardia can result in blood not flowing properly and then blood clots form. Any cell within the heart can transform into a group of cells similar to SA node or AV node resulting in extra heartbeats. A good way to detect this is to have an "EP study" (electrophysiology) performed which reveals malfunctioning areas of the heart from within. If a "bad" spot is found, a cardiologist may perform an ablation to convert the cells into scar tissue and terminate the superfluous electrical signals.
One time I pushed myself to the absolute limit running, and ran at 190. Above my theoretical limit. It was intense. Haha.
As a 15 year old my theoretical limit should be 195-205 bpm. I've had my watch record multiple heart rates over 200 bpm, 218 being the highest recorded by my watch. I do not have any heart diseases nor did i do any kind of exercise in that moment. I was actually very chill when that happened.
218 bpm is not normal when you are resting I recommend you should get that checked out
@@Electricpants1yeah, sounds like tachycardia
I am a amateur cyclist and tested my maxHR multiple times. I am 19 and currently it is 206 bpm. So, the rule of thumb doesn't allways apply.
You arent a cyclist
Suffered AVNRT, a form of SVT. Heart rate would go from resting 70bpm to 200bpm in a single beat. Drs brushed it off as panic attacks for a decade before one realized & rushed me in for an ablation
No one:
The heart of a 210 year old:
the heart of a negative infinity yeat old: *INFINITE BEATS*
After having gone through three cancer episodes, the first one in 2012, I stopped doing my three mile "run" three times per week at age 63. I'm 74 now and thinking about trying to get back to doing thee miles a couple times per week. Going to start tomorrow gradually working my way up. I worried about my heart, but a stress test a few months ago showed I'm just fine. With a maximum heart rate of 136 (210-74), I'm certainly not going to break any records.
Isn't it 220 - age? For your max HR. My doctor used this max number as well.
I’m a paramedic and the fastest I’ve seen was 260 for a patient in v-tach. that patient received some joules that day.
At 2:10 is that a real heart?
Pig heart
7:40 it’s like how when you rev an engine too high it becomes inefficient because you can’t get enough air into the pistons.
Nice Half-Life sound effect
XD
@Anitamil Anitami bruh
It's possible that there was artifacting due to the actual tremors I was dealing with, but I have POTS (a type of tachycardia), was experiencing chronic tachycardia, then on top of that was having very frequent seizures that put me in the ER, and the HR monitor was reading over 180 for a while, shot up above 210 (I forget if it was 216 or 226, because I was bordering on unconscious), then read "++" before falling back down into the 170-190 range (this part I have only somewhat lucid memory of, but it was corroborated by the people who went with me to the ER). I passed out right about then, so I wouldn't doubt that a brief spike into the 220+ range could have caused that.
That being said, even 170+ makes me feel like absolute shit, so even if the heart can *mechanically* beat over 200 bpm in a young adult, I wouldn't say it can *functionally* beat that high, especially not for very long. I've slowly worked my resting HR down from ~110 a few years ago to ~88 now, so even in my tachycardia episodes, I'm typically "only" in the high 160s/low 170s nowadays.
My sister has wolf parkson white. She lives as if she didn't.
A couple years back i had to go to the ER due to acute respiratory failure with hypoxia due to athsma.
My RESTING heart rate was at 180bpm. Needless to say i was heavily monitored in the ICU for almost a week
My son's heart hit 200 in the hospital at 2 years old. All bells and alarms went of and it scared me to death. He's 5 now and fine btw.
Well, babies' average heartbeat is 100-150. But i believe that's only to 3 months old? After that, it slows down.
MY PP IS MADE OUT OF DEMONSHADE
This was so cool. If there are any other of these types of vids they might be cool to see again
Ohma using the advance: hehe now watch this…
4:57 “MY BRAND!”
I love the example with your wife haha
Back when I had cancer when I was 12, about a year into treatment o was in hospital with an infection and I was hooked up to a machine during a routine check. At one point the monitor started screaming at my nurse and she decided to take my pulse manually. I saw this nurse who’d I’d seen many times over the past year and a bit have her colour drain from her face, my heart rate was In the low 300s. She sat there for a second and decided to take my heart rate again on the machine. It started dropping down to the 240s. She called in the doctors (but later told me if it didn’t drop so much in that couple minutes she’d have had to press the emergency alarm that alarms the entire ward and other doctors I’m the hospital). The next couple of days it stayed at 190 ish beats, whilst I spent the whole night in bed. She told me she didn’t believe it which is why she did it twice and took it manually on my pulse or something. I had to have ECGs, wires connected to my whole body for ages.
Literally like the next day too I started having spasms in my muscle tissue all over my body and was in agony. I also ended up having mucousitis so that was fun. I’m glad I didn’t need the emergency button pushed because I already have diagnosed PTSD from everything, although now when I have PTSD reliving and flashbacks and memories, and my anxiety starts up- I can always feel my heart rate and I worry it’s happening again.
Slay
The heart beating in the tray was the best part of this video. I'd like to see more of that!
Are u crazy!? Why. It freaked me out
I LIKE CHERRY JUICE
As a kid, when I was 12/13 years old, I suffered from Tachycardia and my Max BPM ever (from 11 attacks in total) was 274.. Had two surgeries and been okay ever since. If you want to know what they do to stop an episode: make your heart stop. They inject adenosine, your heart stops for a couple seconds to "calm down" and in best case it starts normal again (at abt. 170).
I had WPW syndrome and my maximum heartrate was 237bpm. Had an ablation and I'm fine now
Yooo, same here. Never actually seen/spoke to anyone that also had WPW. Happy to see all went well.
Sometimes I panic about it ever returning whenever I get palpitations, but I have to keep in mind that it's most probably anxiety/stress/panic-attack induced, especially since I went through the operation while I was still young.
@@Ryno_YT Eyy nice to meet you!! Dw man I had the procedure when I was 11, and I'm going to turn 18 this year and I'm doing well, so I assure you won't have any problems!!!! I also have Ebstein anomaly, and with that I play football(or soccer if you're american lol) regularly. Don't think about it too much just enjoy your life like any other person would. Wish you a Happy and healthy life mate!!!
At 28 years of age my BPM was in excess of 300. My AV node was functioning like a 6 lane expressway instead of a 2 lane road according to my cardiologist. My form of surgery was in the experimental stage when performed 32 years ago. Thank heaven for Science!
My max heart rate is apparently 185 which is scary because I’ve had a heart rate of 190 bpm in the hospital. I forget what exactly was wrong with me but I manage it with medication now.
you dead boi, you're in hell now, yes this is hell, welcome!
Dr sent me for a stress test.
Hit 180 bpm, uphill at speed on a treadmill. tech said we can stop here. I was more than glad to comply!
I was born with WPD (Wolf Parkinson Wyde). I did get to the 300+ limit a few times. I eventually got surgery for it, but it wasn't removed. Instead, they caturized the extra electrode.
480 bpm sounds like 12 yo me mining netherrack in minecraft
XD
I'm 39 and got a max 194 bpm on the stairmaster today. Usually get up to 180 to 185 but I was feeling good today and pushed it.
geomety dash players
2:40 I really had to laugh here, not because something comedic happened, but because I find it so fascinating how our body works
210 minus age, but I was able to comfortably hit 220 doing cardio at age 16
probably depends on more factors like weight, height, etc.
That's a general thing. You can go above 220 or your max could be 150.
When I was 16, my theoretical max heart rate was 194 bpm. I once had a workout where my heart rate reached above 220. At that point my heart started skipping beats every couple seconds. I didn’t have to go to the hospital or ER but I think I just got lucky. My heart rate dipped below 200 shortly after I stopped but it took about 10 minutes for it to go below 160. The worst symptoms were lightheadedness and a headache.
Nothing like this happened since, most likely because I learned how to pace myself in my workouts.