Originally posted by oracleslave
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Lowering resting heart rate
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Originally posted by russell View PostI enjoy running (outside) though, and my knees are ok, not had a problem, good trainers and running technique help. I would find a rowing machine boring.
Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.Comment
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Originally posted by suityou01 View PostThat's so weird, there's this other poster on here called Minestrone who also obsesses about running.
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Originally posted by russell View PostIf you take any top athletes rating heart rate it will be low, top cyclist can be as low as 30. Take the heart rate of a overweight sedentary person and it will be over 70-80. I think there is a strong correlation between fitness and rhr.Comment
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Originally posted by oracleslave View PostAm not saying there isn't a strong correlation, just that there are better measurement indicators. My resting heart rate is 60 but I'd venture there are a lot of people with resting heart rates between 60 and 90 for arguments sake that are loads fitter than me.Comment
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Originally posted by russell View PostIf you take any top athletes rating heart rate it will be low, top cyclist can be as low as 30. Take the heart rate of a overweight sedentary person and it will be over 70-80. I think there is a strong correlation between fitness and rhr.
Athletes and those who train cardio on a regular basis will get it below 50. Below 40 is unusual and anything close to 30 is rare. AFAIK the lowest recorded for any sports person was Miguel Induraine who had a resting rate of 29 bpm.
Bear in mind that your resting rate goes up by around 1 bpm per year once you get past 35 or so as well."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View Post60-80 is the normal healthy range. Above 100 is Tachycardia, below 50 Brachycardia, although it depends on age and other symptoms to decide if it's a problem or not.
Athletes and those who train cardio on a regular basis will get it below 50. Below 40 is unusual and anything close to 30 is rare. AFAIK the lowest recorded for any sports person was Miguel Induraine who had a resting rate of 29 bpm.
Bear in mind that your resting rate goes up by around 1 bpm per year once you get past 35 or so as well.Comment
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Originally posted by russell View PostThanks Dave, next time just post the link to Wikipedia
Ex wife was a GP so I have a smattering of medical knowledge picked up by osmosis while she was in Med school and then in practice. I'm also a bit of a cycling nut, hence knowing who Miguel is and a bit about him from magazine articles. I could tell you all about Lance Armstrongs lung capacity as well if you like."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostI would if I was quoting it.
Ex wife was a GP so I have a smattering of medical knowledge picked up by osmosis while she was in Med school and then in practice. I'm also a bit of a cycling nut, hence knowing who Miguel is and a bit about him from magazine articles. I could tell you all about Lance Armstrongs lung capacity as well if you like.Comment
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Originally posted by russell View PostAh ok sorry, just read the article on heart rate and it mentioned Miguel and the other factoids. My bad."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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