I have to think back a couple years to when I was a nurse in a cardiac unit![]()
Your max HR is not a real max, but a guideline on how how high you can safely up (generally based on age). The danger of running a really high heart rate is you end up pumping less blood to the body than you do at a lower HR (the heart has less time to fill, so less if pumped out each beat which leads to a lower cardiac output). You can't sustain a really high heart rate for a long time - you'll get light headed and eventually pass out. In theory you could have a 'heart attack' if you have underlaying coronary artery disease (partially blocked arteries that supply blood/oxygen to your heart muscle) and sustained the elevated HR long enough to cause damage to the cardiac muscle (from lack of O2)
You were right to stop when you did, if you pushed on and elevated your heart rate more, or just sustained that HR you would have gotten dizzy, nausea, passed out, etc.
Your body can respond to the same situation in different ways at different times. Depends on what you ate, how you sleep, stress, tired muscles, etc. So it may be due to lack of riding that your HR was higher today, or it may be for some other reason.




Reply With Quote
In my dreams, only.
