The techniques that could be employed in sprinting includes:
- begin to run in a more upright position.
- head begins to rise,
- spine elongates and straightens out,
- eyes are fixed onto the end of the sprint lane.
<h3>What are the phases of sprinting?</h3>
Sprinting is a type of forward movement where the athlete puts in maximum force in order to attain maximum speed.
The stages of sprinting include:
- the start
- the acceleration
- drive or top speed
- deceleration
In drive or top speed stage, the aim is to achieve and maintain maximum speed.
The techniques that could be employed in sprinting includes:
- begin to run in a more upright position.
- head begins to rise,
- spine elongates and straightens out,
- eyes are fixed onto the end of the sprint lane.
Learn more about sprinting at: brainly.com/question/10899975
Call 911 or go to the h ospital. CVA's (Cerbrovascular accidents) are a blanket term for two distinct types of strokes, Hemmoraghic and occlusive. Hemmoraghic strokes are the more dangerous as it is characterized by a ruptured artery that will not only keep the brain proximal to it hypoperfused, but also will caused by Intracranial Pressure to increase eventually leading to compression of the brain and herniation through the foramen magnum, both ultimate death. It is characterized by the common. Symptomatic of a stroke, predominately hemiparesis (one sided paralysis), muscle weakness, aphasia (inability to speak), confusion, as well as severe tearing pain, the worst headache, and in the patients view a large gunshot sound.
Occlusive Stroked are cause in the name way as a heart attack, in which a blood vessel supplying brain tissue becomes blocked by plaque to the point that the area proximal to it lack proper perfusion and may begin to infarct. Symptoms and progression is much slower and more moderate, with it lacking the thunderclap noise, and severe headache but it shares the paralysis, apashia, and one sided muscle tone. TIAs or Transient Ischemic Attacks are occlusive strokes that have cleared, one their own, however they are an indication of future stroke.
In either case they are both medical emergencies that need to be treated in the hospital as soon as possible. So take the patient to the hospital or call an ambulance.
The answer is 30%. I think...