Your heart speeds up to pump extra food and oxygen to the muscles. Breathing speeds up to get more oxygen and to get rid of more carbon dioxide. When a fit person, such as an athlete, exercises the pulse rate, breathing rate and lactic acid levels rise much less than they do in an unfit person.
when a person climbs on a mountain the breathing of a person will become difficult because the rate if oxygen is more
Usually you would intubate the person and and get them on a ventilator or oxygen
faster breathing rate deep(er) breathing/big(ger) breaths (Ⓐ heavy/harder/gasping) exercise/more energy needed/faster respiration more/a lot of oxygen required/used less oxygen (available) more carbon dioxide/lactic acid (in blood)
If this were to occur, a person would experience a lactic acid build up in their muscles causing pain and fatigue.
On average, a person inhales approximately 21% of oxygen from the air during normal breathing.
Breathing is one of the components of the respiring. When a person respires, the person will breath in oxygen and exhale (breath out) carbon dioxide. Oxygen replaces carbon dioxide which is toxic in large amounts and keeps the body healthy.
Lactic acid can form in a person's body during intense physical activity when the muscles require energy faster than oxygen can be delivered. This results in the anaerobic breakdown of glucose, leading to the buildup of lactic acid as a byproduct.
The average person needs around 740 kilograms of oxygen per year for breathing and cellular respiration. This is based on an average adult breathing about 550 liters of oxygen per day.
Signs of oxygen debt in a person include heavy breathing, rapid heartbeat, and fatigue. These symptoms occur when the body is unable to supply enough oxygen to the muscles during strenuous physical activity.
When a person continues breathing heavily for some time after exercising in order to repay an oxygen debt, it means that the supply of oxygen in less than the demand. This means that the body is working hard and the amount of oxygen cannot cope with the level of activity.
Your heart speeds up to pump extra food and oxygen to the muscles. Breathing speeds up to get more oxygen and to get rid of more carbon dioxide. When a fit person, such as an athlete, exercises the pulse rate, breathing rate and lactic acid levels rise much less than they do in an unfit person.