We gasp when we have difficulty breathing. We also gasp in reaction to emotional events, such as surprise, shock or disgust. In these cases it is an involuntary reaction.
You body requires more oxygen when you work out. Your breathing rate changes according to your bodies need. Breathing rate is also both a voluntary and involuntary muscle contraction. Meaning you can control it (to some extent...i.e. Temporarily holding your breath) but during events such as sleep or if you were quadriplegic, your brain is able to maintain breathing subconsciously.
The evolution of the first air-breathing animals that could live on land
No, inhalers are meant to aid your breathing/coughing when you have asthma. They will not assist you at playing a sport.
The body maintains homeostasis through regulation of external events that would impact internal affairs. Sweating, drinking water, breathing deeper are all example of external events impacting on internal reactions.
so they wont get tired fast. they keep a steady breathing rate and maintain a certain speed.
so they wont get tired fast. they keep a steady breathing rate and maintain a certain speed.
Breathing can be either a verb or noun, It is the present participle of the verb "to breathe." Examples: VERB- She was breathing hard. ('she' is the subject, 'was breathing' is the verb) NOUN- The patient's breathing was uneven. ('breathing' is the subject, 'was' is the verb)
Diaphragmatic breathing, abdominal breathing, belly breathing or deep breathing is breathing that is done by contracting the diaphragm, a muscle located horizontally between the chest cavity and stomach cavity. Air enters the lungs and the belly expands during this type of breathing.
The two phases of breathing are breathing in and breathing out. Humans breathe in oxygen and they release carbon dioxide when they breathe out.
Spontaneous breathing means that the person is breathing without having to think about it.
The suffix that means breathing is "-pnea," which is commonly used in medical terminology to refer to conditions related to breathing, such as apnea (temporary cessation of breathing) or dyspnea (difficulty breathing).