Researchers have revised the heart rate formula, setting a lower maximum for women.

This means a woman could hear a worse prognosis than she actually had.
The problem arose because peak heart rates were based on males only.
"Now we know for the first time what is normal for women, and it's a lower peak heart rate than for men," Discovery News quoted Martha Gulati, assistant professor of medicine and preventive medicine and a cardiologist at Northwestern Medicine, as telling ScienceBlog.
Gulati is the lead author of the study appearing in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation.
The old formula is 220 minus the participant's age. But Gulati recommends 206 minus 88 percent of age, for women.
Advertisement
Gulati said: "Before, many women couldn't meet their target heart rate.
Advertisement
To get the new number, Gulati and her team analysed data from nearly 5,500 women over the age of 35.
Gulati said: "It's important to not get complacent that we have data on men and assume women must be the same. They're not."
Source-ANI