5.6 L/min. for a male...4.9 L/min for a female
120 grams a day
Cardiac index (CI) is better. Because you count with the body surface. When you have a cardiac output (CO) of certain value in a small and thin person, the same value can be insufficient in a tall and fat person. In CI you devide CO by the person's surface and you get much better idea of what's going on ;)
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well I'm not sure what "cardacc output" is but I certainly know what cardiac output is: the volume of blood pumped by the heart per minute (mL blood/min) for example an average person has a resting heart-rate of 70 beats per minute and a resting stroke volume of 70 milliliters per beat, so the cardiac out put is: Cardiac output= 70(beats) X 70 milliliters= 4900 milliliters per minute
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The cardiac reserve capacity is the difference between the rate at which the heart pumps blood and its maximum capacity for pumping blood a any given time. It's the potential capacity of the heart to function well beyond its basal level.
your output should be relatively close to what you intake. A normal person will have anywhere from 400cc's to 900cc's
Venous pooling results in a decrease in cardiac output when a person goes from a lying to standing position. Venous pooling occurs when there is a buildup of blood in the veins of the legs that results due to gravitational pull when changing positions.
The answer is 4,500mL/minute.Cardiac output is the volume of blood being pumped by the heart. To compute it, use this equation:Cardiac Output (Q) = SV (stroke volume) × HR (heart rate)So, cardiac output = 60 mL x 75 beats per minute = 4,500 mL/min
You should be aiming for a urine output above 1 ml/kg/hr