Anonymous wrote:Your heart rate is slightly elevated all day long when you exercise so yeah if you’re sedentary one day it’ll be lower.
I also find mine is a few bpm higher in summer months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Should be resting heart rate decrease as things like sleep quality/hydration/fitness level increase?
I’m asking because I’ve confused myself. Over the past year I’ve increased my physical fitness by a lot and been more careful about sleep, nutrition and hydration. I noticed a very obvious decrease in my resting heart rate over the course of this year.
The last month or so, my average resting heart rate has increased by 4-6 bpm while everything else stayed the same. I’m assuming it was due to the heat but I’m not sure.
A few days ago I had a gum graft and am on exercise restrictions. I haven’t taken any medication except aleve on day 1. Somehow, in spite of zero exercise, my resting heart rate is down by 10 bpm from its recently elevated state.
I thought deconditioning would increase my resting heart rate? I’m so confused!
My RHR is always lower than usual when I take rest days, if my Garmin is to be believed. I think it's because your body is *really* resting. It's not deconditioning.
Anonymous wrote:Should be resting heart rate decrease as things like sleep quality/hydration/fitness level increase?
I’m asking because I’ve confused myself. Over the past year I’ve increased my physical fitness by a lot and been more careful about sleep, nutrition and hydration. I noticed a very obvious decrease in my resting heart rate over the course of this year.
The last month or so, my average resting heart rate has increased by 4-6 bpm while everything else stayed the same. I’m assuming it was due to the heat but I’m not sure.
A few days ago I had a gum graft and am on exercise restrictions. I haven’t taken any medication except aleve on day 1. Somehow, in spite of zero exercise, my resting heart rate is down by 10 bpm from its recently elevated state.
I thought deconditioning would increase my resting heart rate? I’m so confused!