Im at 45 right now, but I predict late August after a few 80-85 mile weeks I'll be ~40.
Lowest ever is 39 BPM.
Im at 45 right now, but I predict late August after a few 80-85 mile weeks I'll be ~40.
Lowest ever is 39 BPM.
Mine was often in the high 40's. I think as soon as I wake up it goes up pretty fast to 58/60. It's rare that I've seen it below that, weird because I'm in much better shape year after year.
ouchmyfoothurts wrote:
Im at 45 right now, but I predict late August after a few 80-85 mile weeks I'll be ~40.
Lowest ever is 39 BPM.
ya I'm in the mid-high 40's im going to assume this is the lowest I've ever had. i believe the lowest ever recorded that wasnt dude to some strange health reason was 29 by a cross country skier. don't quote me on that tho
My beats per minute never been the same
Lowest was coming down from living at altitude for a few months for vacation @ about ~42 BPM. When I take a while off I stay around 52, in training about 47.
Lowest ever was 30bpm. Lowest month average was 34bpm.
Miguel Indurain had a resting heart rate of 28
i had a blood pressure monitor for a day recently
i thought i had a blood pressure problem but doc said i was ok after checking all the readings
the bpm was mostly around 58-60 and i was resting mostly
55 yo cyclist
50 or so now, drops very quickly to 39-43bpm when trained (always seems to be within that range when I'm fit, and always 50-55 when not fit).
Apparently my heart is very large and beats very forcefully. This is neither good nor bad, but my systolic pressure is high while distolic pressure is low. Kicks like a mule, with a very low max HR.
Strangely (and tested with multiple HRMs), my HR spikes very early very high in a workout then after about 5min returns to a happy baseline. Absolute HRmax seems to be about 180-185, and it's standard for it to spike up to 170 within a few minutes of starting a workout to drop right back down to 140 or so within 5min tops.
ReallySlow wrote:
Miguel Indurain had a resting heart rate of 28
Even crazier than that, to me, was that he would finish a stage of the tour like today and within 30 seconds his heart rate would be back under 60 bpm.
One day it will be zero, you will probably be ecstatic.
george oscar bluth wrote:
ReallySlow wrote:Miguel Indurain had a resting heart rate of 28
Even crazier than that, to me, was that he would finish a stage of the tour like today and within 30 seconds his heart rate would be back under 60 bpm.
HEard the name but not familiar with him. that sounds like the effects of something illegal..was he clean?
Doctor sexy wrote:
HEard the name but not familiar with him. that sounds like the effects of something illegal..was he clean?
nope
epo
he was a nice guy and got away with it
Doctor sexy wrote:
george oscar bluth wrote:Even crazier than that, to me, was that he would finish a stage of the tour like today and within 30 seconds his heart rate would be back under 60 bpm.
HEard the name but not familiar with him. that sounds like the effects of something illegal..was he clean?
He was a cylcist in the 90s that won 5 consecutive TdFs. Make of that what you will.
39. Usually 40-42 when fit.
Apparently my heart is very large and beats very forcefully. This is neither good nor bad, but my systolic pressure is high while distolic pressure is low. Kicks like a mule, with a very low max HR.
What are your thoughts on this? I have a similar issue. I often have a tremendously hard pulse that is distracting at best or rather concerning at worst, though I've had a comprehensive slate of tests run indicating that everything is working properly. Systolic readings in the 130s and 140s are typical for me (particularly in doctors' offices, where I know anxiety is a factor). Resting pulse usually hangs between 40 and 45, though it occasionally dips to 38 or 39. I'm 30 years old.
Do the hard pulse and blood pressure readings ever worry you or have you just accepted it's anomalous but harmless and moved on?
54 right now. Lowest I've recorded was 44. All of my training buddies who are a little slower, mostly older, and run less miles have a lower HR than me. I wonder why that is.
48 right now, lowest its been is 37 this past outdoor season.
Just sitting here now, after my dinner and 4.5mi walk, I'm at 73. Waking pulse is almost never below the upper 50s nowadays (after 40+ years of not being able to run). I'd been doing some uphill treadmill walks, with an idea of gradually getting the heart stronger and the resting pulse down, but my heart objected.
I believe the lowest pulse I ever clocked BITD was 45, higher than most people's. I think my pulse was just naturally set high--in workouts I'd often gotten it well above 240. Dan Predmore also ran at Cornell; I heard he had a resting pulse of 28.
60 when untrained, closer to 50 when trained/in shape