Submitted by CanGroundbreaking814 t3_ylgnyq in askscience
As people do more exercise the assumption is their resting heart rate and even their non-resting heart rate (BPM) lowers. Why is that?
Submitted by CanGroundbreaking814 t3_ylgnyq in askscience
As people do more exercise the assumption is their resting heart rate and even their non-resting heart rate (BPM) lowers. Why is that?
coffee_collection t1_iuzql54 wrote
An athlete’s resting heart rate may be considered low when compared to the general population. A young, healthy athlete may have a heart rate of 30 to 40 bpm.
That’s likely because exercise strengthens the heart muscle. It allows it to pump a greater amount of blood with each heartbeat. More oxygen is also going to the muscles.
This means the heart beats fewer times per minute than it would in a nonathlete.
https://www.healthline.com/health/athlete-heart-rate#resting-rate