Guest guest Posted May 2, 2003 Report Share Posted May 2, 2003 I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? Antti Ali Loytty Lappeenranta, Finland Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2003 Report Share Posted May 3, 2003 I would get my heart rate monitor checked. Vladimir Bellevue CPT Atlanta Ga >>antti_ali_loytty wrote: I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? Antti Ali Loytty Lappeenranta, Finland<< Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 4, 2003 Report Share Posted May 4, 2003 Antti Ali Loytty wrote: > I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes > walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate > monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? Absolutely. I've seen 216 on my HR monitor (confirmed roughly by finger-on-wrist) on multiple occasions in weight training, and I'm 46 years old. Wayne Hill Westborough, MA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2003 Report Share Posted May 5, 2003 Wayne Hill and Ali Loytty write: >Loytty -- I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes > walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate > monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? Hill --Absolutely. I've seen 216 on my HR monitor (confirmed roughly by finger-on-wrist) on multiple occasions in weight training, and I'm 46 years old. >> Ali & Wayne, Get Harvey 'big bud " Maron to verify this -- 238 is too high for training -- possibilities of fibrillation?. (overkill to its extreme) Try this for Hill/dune sprints. (dune sprints may? be even more taxing? vary surfaces and inclinations as possible) 2 sec's accelerate, then *10* secs (NOT 60 SEC's) max effort -- walk/slide back to bottom of hill dune, walk around a bit and see how high heart rate gets -- when it returns to 115-120, repeat 5-6 times. I'm not sure training past max predictable, by age, heart rate is beneficial on a " regular? " basis. Add seconds to 10 as needed. Never more than 20? depending on goals, training history, neural efficiency and fiber type?! Jerry Telle Lakewood CO USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2003 Report Share Posted May 5, 2003 Wayne Hill and Ali Loytty write: >Loytty -- I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes > walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate > monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? Hill --Absolutely. I've seen 216 on my HR monitor (confirmed roughly by finger-on-wrist) on multiple occasions in weight training, and I'm 46 years old. >> Ali & Wayne, Get Harvey 'big bud " Maron to verify this -- 238 is too high for training -- possibilities of fibrillation?. (overkill to its extreme) Try this for Hill/dune sprints. (dune sprints may? be even more taxing? vary surfaces and inclinations as possible) 2 sec's accelerate, then *10* secs (NOT 60 SEC's) max effort -- walk/slide back to bottom of hill dune, walk around a bit and see how high heart rate gets -- when it returns to 115-120, repeat 5-6 times. I'm not sure training past max predictable, by age, heart rate is beneficial on a " regular? " basis. Add seconds to 10 as needed. Never more than 20? depending on goals, training history, neural efficiency and fiber type?! Jerry Telle Lakewood CO USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2003 Report Share Posted May 5, 2003 I know this isn't the kind of info people want to see on a health and fitness list, but bear with me. I was recklessly experimental in high school, and I once tried freebasing cocaine. My heart started beating so fast that it really frightened and concerned me, so I took my pulse several times. The readings were consistently well over 200, some near 250, and this lasted for around 10 minutes or so. I was only about 16, though. As far as I know, the incident caused no permanent damage. So, in my experience, such heart rates are definitely humanly possible. Incidentally, the stereotypical scare info about smoking crack/cocaine was all true: in the following hours I felt super-cool and superior to others, was rude to my friends, and despite the scare I desperately wanted to do it again. Fortunately, I had no real access to the stuff and never did. Given the addiction potential and the likelihood that I could have died if my heart wasn't perfectly healthy, I would now definitely classify it as something too dangerous to even experiment with. Wilbanks ville, FL > > > I did some " all-out " sprinting uphill 5 x 1 minute with 2 minutes > > walking down the hill in between. After the third sprint my heart rate > > monitor showed a " modest " 238bpm. Is this possible? > > Absolutely. I've seen 216 on my HR monitor (confirmed roughly by > finger-on-wrist) on multiple occasions in weight training, and I'm 46 > years old. > > Wayne Hill > Westborough, MA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2003 Report Share Posted May 6, 2003 > Ali & Wayne, Get Harvey 'big bud " Maron to verify this -- 238 is too high for > training -- possibilities of fibrillation?. (overkill to its extreme) Sorry I did not pick this up. Sprinting is not one of my interests and with time always an isssue I did not follow this thread.. Jerry is 100% on the mark. 238 is much too high and is certainly not normal. I would see an M.D. to set up ambulatory ECG monitoring and capture the event on tape. I would not delay since results could be serious. Harvey Maron, M.D. Steamboat Springs, CO. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2003 Report Share Posted May 6, 2003 , Thanks for your post. I hope that kids will see it and realize that some things you try (cocaine included) can kill you the first time. I think many people try to tell youngsters that they can do drugs once and it's okay. Thanks, Columbia, SC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2003 Report Share Posted May 7, 2003 Yes 238 bpm is 'humanly' possible but I am skeptical about it being achieved via normal healthy exercise. 238 is roughly 4 beats per seconds, now think back, do you recall your heart making four full beats each second? Technically I think 238 might be considered some form of cardiac arrest. I have a form of SVT, super ventricular tachycardia. Basically my heart will take off beating like a mofo for no apparent reason. I have been clocked by ER staff on sophisticated monitoring equipment in excess of 225. At this rate I could not detect any discernable separate heartbeats, it was more like a snare drum doing a drum roll - very fast beats that all ran together. I, by the way, was not breathing hard, as you do when you are in oxygen debt, but rather felt a great heavy invisible pressure on my chest. This has happened only four times in my life, twice when I was in my teens and twice during my late 30's, I am 40 now. The episodes in my teens I just laid on the couch and marveled at my heart rate until it slowed down to normal, around 20 minutes later. The episodes during my 30's my heart was still beating hard after 45 minutes with no signs of stopping so I called 911 per my doctor's orders and the paramedics came and gave me a chemical form of defibulation called Idenicard. The Idenicard is a real trip because it is basically designed to stop your heart, i.e. go from 238 to 0 in about 1 second. Your heart then rebounds and starts to climb back up but (hopefully) stabilizes you somewhere much lower than where you were at before (and you feel loads better). Anyway, not to bore you with my medical history, but I give you this backgrounder because I would have to say that based on my experience I would think a 'normal' exercise induced, oxygen debt replacing type heartbeat just could not pound that fast that fully. I could be wrong though. Dennis Nixon Dallas, TX Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2003 Report Share Posted May 8, 2003 Once when I was 40 with a theoretical max HR of 180 ( I beleive that's correct) I was jogging with a HR monitor on a mountain trail. While resting and fully recovered with HR less then 70, my dogs started chasing a momma bear with 2 cubs (very dangerous, as they sometimes will chase the dogs back to you). Well anyway, its not often one has opportunity to observe their own HR under such stimulating circumstances, and yes it almost maxed out at over 175 with only a slight accelerated respiratory rate. At that no point there was no resumption of exertion. I found that interesting as I'm not a high level aerobic athlete, and would have had difficulty exercising hard enough to hold or even achieve a max HR like that. Hal Lloyd Nome AK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2003 Report Share Posted May 10, 2003 Hal Lloyd writes: <<Well anyway, its not often one has opportunity to observe their own HR under such stimulating circumstances, and yes it almost maxed out at over 175 with only a slight accelerated respiratory rate. At that no point there was no resumption of exertion. I found that interesting as I'm not a high level aerobic athlete, and would have had difficulty exercising hard enough to hold or even achieve a max HR like that>> Telle-- Your heart rate, in all likelihood, was mental/emotional(adrenalin?) induced --- much like a race car driver's or basketballl coach's? *Not* a recommended method! I suggest you tie your dogs to a tree and you gently --while monitoring heart rate --chase the cubs (or not). Jerry Telle Lakewood CO USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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