As regular readers will recall, I have been taking daily heart rate measurements to determine how exercise improves heart rate variability (HRV), a valuable measure of heart health. You can refer back to my post Do You Have a Healthy Heart? to learn about what I am measuring and why it matters.
Results for April
My seated resting heart rate has shown a decrease from 75.8 beats per minute (BPM) down to 73.1 BPM (a good thing). Also my chosen HRV metric, RMSSD, has increased from 25.6 to 28.1. Remember, increased HRV is what I am after, as a heart that shows a good degree of variability tends to be healthy.
In looking more carefully at my results (baseline, March, and April), the numbers are all fairly similar and within a standard deviation of each other. So rather than worry whether the numbers are “statistically significant” or not, I will be satisfied that the trend is improving.
Prediction: I will need several years of solid exercise before I see the type of improvements I am hoping for (resting heart rate around 60 BPM and RMSSD about 2x or 3x where it is now).
Other Thoughts on Exercise and the Central Nervous System (CNS)
I have spent quite a bit of time reading and studying the roles of the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems. As I learn more, I am absolutely amazed at the incredible complexity that is found in the mind-body connection. As an example, I can review my daily HRV measurements and see EXACTLY which days of CrossFit provided a strenuous CNS workout, and how long it took me to recover (usually 2 or 3 days). At some level my mind processes the intensity of the workout and decides how to regulate my heart rate for the next several days. Pretty cool!
If this idea of mind-body connection is intriguing to you, you might be interested in the following research paper: “From catastrophe to complexity: a novel model of integrative central regulation of effort and fatigue during exercise in humans.” The three key conclusions are as follows:
- “… all physiological functions are … regulated by CNS control mechanisms to ensure that bodily harm does not result.”
- “The conscious sensation of fatigue does not arise directly from the action of metabolites in the periphery, but rather from the regulatory centres in the subconscious parts of the brain, the function of which is to ensure homoeostasis during exercise. Therefore the distinct sensation of fatigue is not directly related to a physical end point, but is rather an interpretation of the effect of the current level of activity on future exercise capacity and any threats that immediate and future events pose to the maintenance of homoeostasis.”
- “As the sensation of fatigue is an emotion rather than a physical state, pacing strategies and their control during self regulated exercise—the journey and not just the end point—are probably the most important phenomena in exercise physiology.”
So remember, that fatigue you feel as you try to finish one more pull up, it’s all in your mind.
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