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Heart BPM soaring
I was in a bad car-bike accident last November.
Prior to the accident I was riding 230-240 miles per week. Heart rate at rest was less than 50 bpm. I was unable to do any exercise until recently. My resting rate is now over 70 BPM. I finally was able to get back on the bike today and my bpm were easily over 150 and with very little exertion. Have any of you had a similar experience and more importantly did your bpm return to pre-accident levels? Needless to say I am concerned if it doesn't as it could be the end of my Ironman competitions. |
Patience. After six months off, it's going to take you a while to get back into shape. I wouldn't schedule any ironmans in the next year; then take a look and re-assess.
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You're out of shape, did you expect anything different?
Give it a month back on the bike for your heart rate to calm down. |
You've gone from a top 0.1% athlete to an average Joe. Nothing stopping you from getting back to where you were except time. Accept that a lot of work needs to be done. This season is a rebuilding season. Next season you will be close to where you were before. 2019, if you keep it up, you should be back in full.
When I was 24 yo and in elite conditioned road racer, I had a very serious head injury. I got back on the bike much sooner than you to race one last season. (11/3 my accident. Back on rollers in February, the road in March. September when I rode my last race, I was still a shadow of the racer I had been. Unless you have pressing goals that cannot wait, watch carefully that you don't overdo it. I came back too fast, broke a few "rules" re: knees and have paid for it with a life-long condition. (That last season I knew before going in was it; that I would never pin on a number again. So I rode and trained to be the best I could possibly be that season. No regrets, despite the injury I inflicted on myself.) Keep your head up and plug away. It's so worth it, even despite the time and challenges you will face. Ben |
Assuming you are cleared by your doctor, you just need to keep at it. You didn't get out of shape in a day. You won't get back into it in a day either. Keep going!
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Humorous paraphrase:
I haven't worked out in months. Now, I feel like I haven't worked out in months. What's wrong? |
Iron man, schmiron man.
Lucky to be alive. Everything else is icing. Count your blessings. -Tim- |
Thanks
Thank you all for your thoughts. It looks like patience is the key for a very impatient man.
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I don't know about after an accident, but I lay off the bike every winter. It takes a few months' of riding to get my HR and legs back into sync.
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Originally Posted by erickre
(Post 19613023)
Thank you all for your thoughts. It looks like patience is the key for a very impatient man.
Too many of us are lost every year. |
If it's any consolation, I've found that rebound time is generally shorter than the first time you reached a level of conditioning.
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My 2011 bike crash had me off for only 4 months due to C6 and clavicle fracture, C5-C6-C7 compression/shifting resulting in Long Thoracic Nerve damage and even with resulting issues to this day recovery was possible. Resting HR before/at time in ICU of the crash was 38bpm and 2 years ago before my first prostate cancer treatment it was 32BPM, so return to pre-crash condition is possible just time consuming. My first IRONMAN was 2013 and I fared fairly well considering my 63yo body was beat up. My suggestion is to follow doctor/therapist recommendations and give yourself time to recover.
Had a total right shoulder joint replacement last October and my first swim test will be next week with results helping to determine if I try another IM in 2019. My first priority however will be to improve on my 307 miles in 22 hours this past Bike Sebring 12/24 Hour Race to 400 non drafting miles in the 2018 Bike Sebring 12/24 Hours for a RAAM Qualifier Classification. Good luck with smooth roads ahead. :thumb: :thumb: |
I had a knee injury due to two falls on 2016 Eroica California. Damn toe clips! I was on and off the bike for a few weeks with swollen knee and previously undiagnosed arthritis. I developed a high heart rate (for me) of 155 to 165, sometimes on flat roads at slight effort. It also would not come back down when I stopped. After several diagnostics, I found I have a mild aortic stenosis (wonky heart valve). I had a couple of mild dizzy spells, but no chest pain. It took a couple of months of tests to nail down. I just turned 68, and ride almost 5K miles a year. I now have a new beta blocker (Metropolol), and a small dose aspirin a day. I'm back doing 100 miles a week, 40-45 resting heart rate, usually 120-140 on the bike. I've lost 20 lbs and feel great. Long story short, see a cardioligist, and get checked out. I feel great now, and Dr. says keep doing what I'm doing, and re-evaluate valve problem in a year. So far so good. Im convinced that part of my hr problem was due to laying off due to the knee. Good luck with yours.
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