Tired of being sick
Senior Member
- Messages
- 565
- Location
- Western PA USA
If I shower at least 3 times a weekThe really important number to monitor, for your own purposes, is heart rate recovery time. This automatically covers a number of problems which doctors typically consider separately. If you are deconditioned, this time will be unusually high, and it will drop as you improve. If you become sick, HR recovery will demonstrate a reduced capacity for aerobic exercise. Our problem is that not only will it be high to begin with, it will also remain high despite attempts at regular exercise.
This is much easier to measure than a 2-day CPET. It will guide you to do the best you can tolerate in your current condition. The rule is simple: if HR recovery time increases, your exercise is too intense; if HR recovery time decreases, you are gaining ground within an exercise envelope you can tolerate. During an episode of PEM, HR excursions while exercising are greater and recovery will be slower. This is the only simple objective measure I know for PEM.
If doctors measured this number, and believed it, there would be far less argument about PEM or PENE. Instead they insist that high HR and long recovery times mean we are not getting enough exercise, and talk about will power. If they were looking at the effect of exercise on HR recovery times, they could quickly recognize how narrow the gap is between our thresholds for useful exercise and PEM. For some the gap is non-existent.
The problem here is that if they are confronted with numbers which violate their preconceptions they insist we must be lying or cheating. After all, how often are doctors' ideas proved wrong in medical journals?
Well then
Why am I not "conditioned" to take a simple shower?
No such thing as conditioned in my vocabulary..........