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tachycardia
(redirected from Increase in heart rate)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
tachycardia: see arrhythmia arrhythmia (ārĭth`mēə), disturbance in the rate or rhythm of the heartbeat.
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tachycardia

Heart rate over 100 (as high as 240) beats per minute. When it is a normal response to exercise or stress, it is no danger to healthy people, but when it originates elsewhere, it is an arrhythmia. Symptoms include fatigue, faintness, shortness of breath, and feeling the heart thumping. It may subside within minutes or hours with no lasting ill effects, but in serious heart, lung, or circulatory disease it can precede atrial fibrillation or heart attack and demands immediate medical attention. Tachycardias can be treated by an electric shock to the heart, by antiarrhythmic drugs, and by pacemakers.


tachycardia [¦tak·ə¦kärd·ē·ə]
(medicine)
Excessive rapidity of the heart's action.


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Before each trial started, the subjects rested until 1 minute had passed without an increase in heart rate.
Previous studies on the daily variation of particulate air pollution and heart rate variability in elderly subjects showed an increase in heart rate (Liao et al.
This is termed cardiovascular drift, where the increase in heart rate and the decrease in stroke volume are equal in magnitude, but opposite in direction (2).
 
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