Yay for biking!
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- This topic has 19 replies, 16 voices, and was last updated 7 years, 4 months ago by
lordofthemark.
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AuthorPosts
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December 22, 2014 at 5:13 pm #1017516
KLizotte
ParticipantCongratulations!
December 22, 2014 at 6:12 pm #1017520vern
ParticipantCongratulations! The exact same thing happened to me…drastically lower cholesterol (and blood pressure) leading to reduced dosages and eventually the total elimination of some medications. As it turns out, the best medicine was getting on my bike most everyday.
December 22, 2014 at 6:33 pm #1017524dkel
ParticipantI’ve always had average blood pressure, thankfully, and before I began obsessively cycling, my hear rate was usually about 80. I took this picture Saturday after using one of those blood pressure machines at the pharmacy.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]7230[/ATTACH]
Pulse: LOW?
December 22, 2014 at 6:57 pm #1017534bobco85
Participant@dkel 102582 wrote:
I’ve always had average blood pressure, thankfully, and before I began obsessively cycling, my hear rate was usually about 80. I took this picture Saturday after using one of those blood pressure machines at the pharmacy.
[IMG]http://bikearlingtonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=7230&stc=1[/IMG]
Pulse: LOW?
High blood pressure runs in my family (both sides), so much so that a sister of mine (she is relatively fit) once remarked to a doctor when he asked her the family medical history: “I already know I’m going to die of a heart attack.”
Dark humor aside, your blood pulse is low compared to the average human, but from all the cycling you can safely consider yourself an athlete. Explanation from the Johns Hopkins Medicine site:
The normal pulse for healthy adults ranges from 60 to 100 beats per minute. The pulse rate may fluctuate and increase with exercise, illness, injury, and emotions. Females ages 12 and older, in general, tend to have faster heart rates than do males. Athletes, such as runners, who do a lot of cardiovascular conditioning, may have heart rates near 40 beats per minute and experience no problems.
December 22, 2014 at 7:07 pm #1017538lordofthemark
ParticipantMy blood pressure which had become an issue for the first time last year is now back to completely normal, and my blood sugar is still an issue, but barely (and more exercise should help)
I love it when a plan comes together! But the big news is the LDL and the triglycerides, which have not been this good in years.
December 22, 2014 at 7:08 pm #1017540Powerful Pete
ParticipantCongratulations to the OP!
December 22, 2014 at 9:56 pm #1017565Orestes Munn
ParticipantCongrats to all you healthy people! Due to improvements in lifestyle, intervention and unknown factors, the bicycling demographic, at least, is at rapidly declining risk of heart disease and stroke, across the country. The next target is Alzheimer disease and even that rate may be responding. Given the bleakness of much health news, that’s comforting.
November 30, 2017 at 8:10 pm #1078889lordofthemark
ParticipantUpdate
All cholesterol numbers are even better than last year, including triglycerides. HDL finally up above 40, first time in years. Blood sugar best in years, just barely above normal range (and that could be the statins) (BP was a bit high today, but that tends to vary and he wants me to get it checked again at the clinic at work, if possible)
Doc “can you convince the folks out in the waiting room to do this?”
Only bad news – doc says that to go off statins, given age and family history, LDLs would have to be below 40, which is very very unlikely to happen.
December 1, 2017 at 12:38 am #1078905anomad
ParticipantIt also does wonders for my mental health! (do they have a little cross eyed smiley face?)
December 1, 2017 at 1:44 am #1078912Rootchopper
ParticipantBack when I was a long distance runner, I had to have a physical for grad school. My dad did it. He was an MD. Took my pulse once. Shook his head. Took it again. Shook his head. I said “It’s okay. 48 is normal for runners.”
It rose after I stopped running but it’s back in the 40s again. When I had my colonoscopy, they gave me a shot to raise my heart rate to give the anesthesiologist some margin for error.
December 1, 2017 at 2:46 am #1078920AFHokie
Participant@Rootchopper 168991 wrote:
Back when I was a long distance runner, I had to have a physical for grad school. My dad did it. He was an MD. Took my pulse once. Shook his head. Took it again. Shook his head. I said “It’s okay. 48 is normal for runners.”
It rose after I stopped running but it’s back in the 40s again. When I had my colonoscopy, they gave me a shot to raise my heart rate to give the anesthesiologist some margin for error.
I think my best resting HR was 42 during my CC physical in HS…doc was a little alarmed until he remembered why I was there for the physical.
If only I could get it that low again today.
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December 1, 2017 at 1:06 pm #1078927Sunyata
Participant@Rootchopper 168991 wrote:
Back when I was a long distance runner, I had to have a physical for grad school. My dad did it. He was an MD. Took my pulse once. Shook his head. Took it again. Shook his head. I said “It’s okay. 48 is normal for runners.”
It rose after I stopped running but it’s back in the 40s again. When I had my colonoscopy, they gave me a shot to raise my heart rate to give the anesthesiologist some margin for error.
My normal resting heart rate is between 37-40, which is low, even for an athlete. My blood pressure is also unusually low when resting. It is always super fun freaking out the new nurses at my doctor’s office every year.
December 1, 2017 at 2:23 pm #1078931huskerdont
ParticipantI was low 40s when I was a runner. Even with all the cycling now, I’m pretty much 50 at best. I suppose that could be age as well as not running, but I’m blaming not being able to run.
December 1, 2017 at 9:32 pm #1078968accordioneur
ParticipantI can’t humble brag about my resting heart rate – except that once, for about an hour, I got it all the way down to zero.
December 5, 2017 at 4:12 am #1079150fxbooks
ParticipantOK, I’ll bite. What happened?
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