cheadle hulme
Guru
- Location
- Llandudno
Varies, average 52, but can be as high as 60 (tested after a stag weekend).
My GP says mine is the lowest he sees though...
My GP says mine is the lowest he sees though...
gavintc said:Hospital staff are often a little concerned with an athletic heart rate. I broke my collar bone recently and the nurses asked me on a number of occasions whether I had a low heart rate.
fossyant said:It really fluffs them up..............
Yeh right.............. it is............. and BP....especially the lower end.....
it's like PUMP....................PUMP...................PUMP............. and ..well.......
Erm...
Pic of bike...pump..puu..p p p p 150........bingo, pre warm has worked.... - doing 100 plus looking at it...FFS................hence I don't use the pulse monitor much any more.
satans budgie said:My age 30 medical for the RAF recorded my HR as 32. Did a lot of running then. Don't know what it is now.
Rockus said:Soz to be a bit of a pooper, but resting HR is a bit relative and influenced by many factors, one off readings should be taken with a pinch of salt. more important methinks is HR Vs effort. Ive hit 95% of my max and felt fine and other times hit that level and felt like dying -usually after a night Jack Daniels.
Im a pharmacist and for me B blockers to lower HR is a bit naughty, mind over matter any time for me. NB they lower your exercise threshold - by lowering work of the heart, essentailly their job for really unhealthy people. So i dont see their benefit in healthy people.
Again sorry to be a bore... lol
Rockus said:Soz to be a bit of a pooper, but resting HR is a bit relative and influenced by many factors, one off readings should be taken with a pinch of salt. more important methinks is HR Vs effort. Ive hit 95% of my max and felt fine and other times hit that level and felt like dying -usually after a night Jack Daniels.
Im a pharmacist and for me B blockers to lower HR is a bit naughty, mind over matter any time for me. NB they lower your exercise threshold - by lowering work of the heart, essentailly their job for really unhealthy people. So i dont see their benefit in healthy people.
Again sorry to be a bore... lol
Rockus said:one off readings should be taken with a pinch of salt.
Rockus said:Thank god for that, i can bearly read too...
Fab Foodie said:
I'm on 50mg Atenolol, have been for nearly 4 years now since stenting (am 47 now and a bit overweight). Can't say I've noticed my performance is any worse since taking them. I'm OK kicking along at 20 mph on the flat and don't seem too much worst than the average club rider of my age. My average HR's are slightly below my peers for a given run, one can only assume that my heart shifts slightly more volume/beat as it is rate-restrained. On a good (naughty) day I've maneged to get my HR up to 160 for a few seconds but it takes a lot of doing!
Overall being on Beta-blockers at my dose has not severely curtailed my cycling performance or enjoyment, but they do make you feel generally a bit lethargic and dopey (more than I was!).
Stig-OT-Dump said:I tried lying down and checking my resting pulse with my garmin (bottom limit 35bpm) and when I uploaded the results, I saw I'd been flat-lining for a 3rd of the time, not that I felt dead.
I think there may be a healthy dose of genes in there - my brothers have low heart rates as well (can't you tell the evenings just used to fly by in our house....).