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Interpreting the results
Lifestyle modification to improve and maintain cardiovascular health for life
Athletic conditioning
By Gary Moller
DipPhEd PGDipRehab PGDipSportMed (Otago) FCE Certified
Certified Nutra-Life and Kordel’s Natural Health and Sports Nutrition Consultant
www.garymoller.com
© Gary Moller 2005
Gary Moller asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
All rights reserved
Last updated: October 16, 2010
© Gary Moller 2005
Table of contents
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© Gary Moller 2005
Introduction
Blood pressure and heart rate (pulse) are the two key indicators of the health of your
cardiovascular system (Heart, lungs, blood vessels and circulation). As we get older, blood
pressure tends to rise, if we do not take care. Stress, smoking, lack of exercise, overweight
and a poor diet will pump the blood pressure to dangerous levels as the years pass. As
many as ½ the population over 55yrs old may have significantly raised blood pressure.
Blood pressure is the best indicator of cardiovascular and general health. This is why blood
pressure is always on the list of things to check when you consult a health professional.
Heart rate, at rest and during activity, is one of the best indicators of general health and
physical fitness. A low resting pulse and one that responds quickly and powerfully to
exercise is a good indicator that you are in good shape.
Technology has advanced to the stage where the person in the street can now accurately
measure blood pressure and heart rate without having to visit a health clinic. This has
many advantages because blood pressure, like heart rate, varies throughout the day and
from one situation to another. The digital blood pressure monitor gives a series of
snapshots throughout the day and over weeks, months and even years, thus giving you and
your health professional detailed information to work from to assess your cardiovascular
health.
A single blood pressure recording taken at a medical clinic can be misleading because the
mere act of taking the reading can cause a spike in blood pressure and heart rate (This is
commonly known as the “white coat phenomenon” when blood pressure and pulse go up in
the presence of a health professional).
A series of readings with your digital blood pressure monitor will:
Identify adverse health trends well before Provide precise feedback on cardiovascular
they become serious medical issues and conditioning progress during athletic
are still treatable by conservative, non- conditioning, including early warning of
invasive methods like lifestyle, exercise over training
and diet
Identify how your cardiovascular system
Demonstrate the subtle, but important responds to stressful situations and
long term benefits of measures like diet, provide positive and immediate feedback
exercise and relaxation of the effectiveness of interventions
Help your medical practitioner refine Identify acute cardiovascular episodes like
medication mixes and doses to perfection a spike or drop in blood pressure or pulse
while removing most of the guess work that should be brought to the attention of
your health practitioner
Help you monitor relatively high risk
situations for raised blood pressure, such
as during pregnancy
Blood pressure and pulse readings are most valuable if you have a health condition that
requires continuous monitoring. Regular readings throughout a pregnancy, for example,
enable early detection of excessive rises in blood pressure well before it becomes a series
health issue.
Consult your medical practitioner
If you have a medical condition, or are pregnant, you are advised to discuss your plans with
your health care provider who should welcome this kind of monitoring and supporting
lifestyle interventions with enthusiasm.
Procedure
All recordings, other than your baseline readings, are taken in a relaxed sitting position with
the monitor held at the same level as the heart (refer to the instructions that come with the
digital blood pressure monitor). Take all readings on your left wrist.
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3. Activate your blood pressure and pulse monitor and continue to relax while the
machine takes the recording.
4. Record the results and how you feel: you might like to note them down in a diary
along with any comments about how you feel.
5. Repeat the procedure (1-4) in the evening while lying in bed immediately before
going to sleep
These are your baseline recordings for the day.
Blood pressure should be at its lowest in the early morning (ideally, less than 120/80 while
lying down and relaxing) as will pulse (pulse should be 70 or less). Depending on how
stressful your day was, the evening baselines will probably be higher than the morning
ones. If readings consistently exceed 120/80, you have some work to do! Read on…
Take regular recordings throughout the day
Pick regular time slots such as 10am, midday, 3pm and early evening. Again, take a mental
note of how you feel and keep a record of the results.
Take readings immediately after significant events
Significant events may be:
Getting to work Being cold or hot
A stressful meeting Exercise
Encountering a phobia Relaxation
Tight deadlines Having a good laugh
Stimulants or depressants (E.g. coffee,
nicotine, alcohol)
Chart your results as you go
You can do this manually, but this is where a computer spreadsheet programme really
comes into its own, if you have a computer.
With each recording that is charted the power and the accuracy of the monitoring grows.
You can go a step further, if you have a computer spreadsheet programme, by adding a
“trend line” that predicts with increasing accuracy where you are heading over months and
even years. Your health care provider will be ecstatic to have a chart with this information
at your next consultation.
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Note: when taking measures with your digital blood pressure monitor, you must be still
otherwise an error may occur during the reading; so stop exercising and sit down while you
do this and take account that heart rate may have already dropped 10 or more beats, as
might blood pressure. Women generally have pulse rates that are 5-10 beats per minute
higher than men. However, one of the lowest pulses I have ever recorded (37 beats per
minute) belonged to a fit 39 year old woman who commutes daily to and from work on a
bicycle.
Blood pressure and pulse
1. Your ideal resting blood pressure is about 120/80 while seated and 10 or so points
lower when lying relaxed (~110/70). If the resting readings of either of these two
numbers are consistently higher than this, then your goal is to bring about a gradual
lowering to the goal of ~120/80.
2. With physical effort, the principal rises are in systolic blood pressure (the higher of
the two readings – 120/), while the diastolic pressure (the lower of the two figures
- /80) should not rise much at all above 80. If diastolic exceeds 100 you might need
to ease off the effort, concentrate on steady breathing and generally relax all the
muscles other than those doing the work. Think positive thoughts and smile while
you exercise!
3. If you are stressed – worrying about work matters, problems at home, impossible
project deadlines, and financial woes or similar, the heart will beat hard and fast and
the blood vessels shrink tight. Blood pressure rises and may be exacerbated by
stimulants like a strong coffee or cigarette.
4. If the blood vessels are becoming narrowed or clogged for any reason, blood
pressure, especially the diastolic reading will be persistently higher than /80 at rest
and during activity. This is typical for a person over 40 years old who has any
combination of a poor diet, smoking, obesity, inactivity, diabetes and persistent
stress. Early clues that this may be the case are:
a. Resting blood pressure is persistently greater than 120/80
b. Resting pulse is quite slow (less than 60) despite poor fitness
c. Both blood pressure readings increase as exercise proceeds
d. Exercise pulse is quite low in relation to the level of perceived effort
e. Blood pressure, especially diastolic, is slow to drop back to pre-exercise levels
after exercise stops. In a healthy person, the diastolic pressure should be
within 5-10 points of 80 within 5 minutes of stopping
5. If one or both of the systolic and diastolic blood pressure measures are persistently
around the 150/100 regions, please consult your medical practitioner before you do
anything else; take along the readout of your measures and be guided by the advice
you receive.
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a. Your medical practitioner may order a blood test to measure your blood
cholesterol. If it is found to be raised, or the ratios between “good” and “bad”
are not healthy, ask that you be given several months to work on diet and
exercise interventions before going down the medication pathway. Read on…
While you are getting the diet sorted, you can commence the following:
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sweeps, curls and punches. Purchase a pair of Kermitt Hydrotherapy Gloves from the
FreeRangers Store.
Drink plenty of fresh water, be careful not to get over-hot and be careful when getting out
and dressing, in case of momentary light-headedness.
Do daily aerobic exercise
Aerobic exercise like vigorous hydrotherapy, brisk walking, jogging, swimming and cycling
do more than just stimulate the circulation and burn calories. It strengthens the heart
muscle and encourages the proliferation of the tiny blood vessels (capillaries) in the
muscles. This proliferation of small blood vessel will help bring a gradual lowering of blood
pressure readings as the months and years pass. 20-30 minutes of quality exercise is
sufficient for most people.
Shed unwanted body fat
The deliciously healthy Okinawa Diet and invigorating daily exercise should result in a highly
beneficial shedding of any excess body fat. Your weight will gradually settle at a level
suited to the “healthy you”. No special dieting is necessary, if you follow the guidelines
here. Let’s face it; weight-loss diets do not work. Lose fat slowly and it will stay off.
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6. If your pulse is erratic (this may show as continual error messages on your, as
compared to non-error readings by other users)
7. Racing pulse (above 100 beats per minute at rest)
8. Unusually slow pulse despite being unfit (less than 60 beats per minute and usually
associated with persistently high resting blood pressure readings).
Monitoring athletic conditioning
Pulse
As athletic conditioning progresses, the early morning baseline pulse rate should steadily
decline. The more highly conditioned the cardiovascular system, the lower the resting
pulse, as compared to earlier readings.
If cardiovascular condition declines for any reason such as due to overtraining, anaemia, or
onset of an infection; the digital blood pressure monitor can provide an early warning of the
need to rest, seek medical advice or to adjust the training regime.
Furthermore, the digital blood pressure monitor will show the progressive increase in resting
pulse if the athlete ceases cardiovascular training for longer than a week.
Irregular Pulse
A common sign of overtraining and mineral depletion is an irregular resting pulse that is
either unusually fast or excessively slow. This is common during periods of heavy training
or competition and when sweating a lot. An irregular pulse may show on the digital blood
pressure and pulse monitor as repeated “error” displays and you may have to resort to
taking manual pulse readings.
The first step is to institute a period of relative rest for several days, doing little in the way
of long or high intensity exercise. Read my instructions for Athletes for using Nutra-Life
Magnesium Complete and commence the supplementation recommendations immediately.
Do not hesitate to consult your doctor at any time and, if the irregular pulse persists despite
these measures, consult your doctor.
Low blood pressure
Low blood pressure in the athlete that is associated with light-headedness when standing up
may be an indication of overtraining, mineral depletion and possibly an inadequate diet for
training and competition needs. However, do not confuse this with the desired benefits of
aerobic conditioning: low blood pressure is a typical and healthy side-effect of long term
aerobic conditioning. Blood pressure drops due to the proliferation of blood vessels in the
trained muscles and the slow pulse.
A period of relative rest and supplementation with minerals as per the Irregular Pulse
recommendations
Peaking for the big competition
When an athlete eases off the training to freshen up over the last days leading up to the big
event when peak performance is required, the resting pulse should decline to be at, below
or very close to best previous baseline readings of recent months. The athlete enters the
competition with confidence knowing that “all systems are go!” An elevated pulse on the
morning of competition may indicate that not all is well and it may be better to cruise
through this competition, saving oneself for another day.
When using pulse for assessing peak condition, take account the possibility that pre-event
nerves are pushing up the resting pulse. Elevated systolic blood pressure alongside an
elevated resting pulse may indicate the interference of pre-event nerves.
Dehydration, overheating, chilling and exhaustion
If the athlete is dehydrated and/or overheated or cold, the pulse will be rapid and blood
pressure may be excessively low, as compared to usual post-exercise readings. This may
also indicate low blood sugar levels, especially if the athlete is feeling faint and nauseous.
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Lie the athlete down; cool or warm as required and give fluid with a teaspoon or two of any
kind of sugar mixed in. Recovery is usually quick.
Overheating without dehydration, such as occurs during intense effort of less than 40
minutes, may show as a rapid pulse with high blood pressure, despite having stopped
exercise. This indicates the need for rapid and aggressive cooling.
Over-drinking without dehydration (Hyponatremia) may show as normal pulse but elevated
blood pressure (Especially diastolic). Other signs are weight gain during the event, feeling
faint, weak muscles and a headache which can become severe. This is common during long
duration events like the marathon or Iron Man triathlons. Any indication of this condition
requires immediate medical attention.
The pulse may be unusually slow and the blood pressure low, if the athlete has hypothermia
(Low body temperature). The skin will be pale or purplish in appearance and speech may
be slurred. The hand grip may be weak and slow to release. This indicates the need for
rewarming of the body core.
In all of the above instances, seek medical help, if symptoms appear to be anything other
than mild.
Product support and product purchases
Gary Moller, Email: gary@myotec.co.nz
Web site: www.garymoller.com
PO Box 7366, Wellington South, Wellington, New Zealand
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