Why Adrenaline Speeds up Heart Rate

Adrenaline triggers body changes related to your "fight-or-flight" response.
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Adrenaline — also called epinephrine — is a hormone secreted by your adrenal glands, which sit on top of each of your kidneys. Once released by these glands, adrenaline produces a variety of effects on your body, including increases in your heart rate.

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Whether you call it epinephrine or adrenaline, its effects on your heart rate are triggered through interactions with certain portals on the surfaces of your cells called "adrenergic receptors."

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Adrenaline is a hormone that prepares your body for a "fight-or-flight" response, which includes boosting your heart rate to pump more oxygen to your muscles.

Read more: What Happens During an Adrenaline Rush?

Basics of Adrenaline

Adrenaline is important to basic survival. When you experience emotional stress or encounter a physically dangerous situation, your body prepares itself for prompt action by triggering your "fight-or-flight" response, according to the Hormone Health Network. This response begins in a region of your brain called the hypothalamus, which sounds the alarm and triggers increased production of adrenaline in your adrenal glands.

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These glands also increase the production of another hormone called cortisol. While cortisol suppresses nonessential activity and prepares your body for damage repair, adrenaline speeds up your heart rate, increases your energy supplies and raises your blood pressure.

Epinephrine and Heart Rate

Adrenaline in your bloodstream achieves its effects on your heart rate by stimulating the adrenergic receptors on cells throughout your heart tissue. Once stimulated, these receptors pass the fight-or-flight message to a specialized type of protein called a G-protein. In turn, G-proteins stimulate other substances inside your cells that trigger a cascading alert effect.

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The epinephrine mechanism of action causes an increase in your heart rate, as well as an increase in the force of each individual heart contraction.

Excessive Adrenalin Production

Under normal circumstances, your body will limit your fight-or-flight response to times of genuine emergency and return to normal function when appropriate. However, if your fight-or-flight response is triggered repeatedly or stays active long-term, the resulting increase in your blood levels of adrenaline and cortisol can significantly disrupt normal functional processes throughout your body, reports the Mayo Clinic.

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In addition to heart disease, potential consequences of this disruption include obesity, depression, sleep disturbances, worsening of existing skin conditions, digestion problems and memory impairment. You might also experience symptoms such as feeling nervous or jittery, dizzy, lightheaded, restless, irritable and could have blurred vision.

Read more: Norepinephrine Versus Epinephrine

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Epinephrine vs. Norepinephrine and More

Adrenaline in your bloodstream also triggers the relaxation of smooth muscle cells throughout your body, notes StatPearls. When you experience significant physical or emotional stress, your adrenal gland produces two other hormones, called norepinephrine and dopamine, in addition to adrenaline and cortisol.

Along with adrenaline, norepinephrine and dopamine belong to a class of substances called catecholamines. According to Michigan Medicine, your doctor may test your blood or urine for the presence of excessive catecholamines if you have high blood pressure or a tumor called a pheochromocytoma, which is known to abnormally increase levels of both adrenaline and norepinephrine.

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