Get your thyroid checked. You sound hypo to me.
Get your thyroid checked. You sound hypo to me.
'02 Eddy Merckx Fuga, Selle An Atomica
'85 Eddy Merckx Professional, Selle An Atomica
'10 Soma Double Cross DC, Selle An Atomica
Slacker on wheels.
I've been diagnosed with low pressure at different times in my adult life. I've been warned not to get up from bed, too quickly or you might fall/faint...which did nearly happen to me in the middle of the night.
Are you eating properly? Do you have enough iron..which should require blood test before ingesting more iron pills than necessary. I've also had low iron at different times.
My partner is mildly narcoleptic...a lifelong disorder that causes him to want to sleep if his body is still...driving, watching a movie in theater, etc. He has low blood pressure (which is aided by cycling fitness.) That's why he bikes..it is partially to re-energize his body. He has been tested at a sleep clinic at hospital..twice in his life.
Last edited by shootingstar; 04-29-2013 at 03:45 AM.
My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.
95/65 is not low BP, it is perfectly fine, and if you are fit, a RHR of 50 is fine too, I am 48 and mine is about 55. I ride with a 40 yr old athlete whose is in the 30s. Do you eat properly? Do you sleep properly? Go for a checkup. Look at your diet, look at your lifestyle. If you eat a crappy cheap diet, it feels like your description. Check your blood sugar, do a random and a starved (you are bound to know someone with a machine) to check that.
[QUOTE=My partner is mildly narcoleptic...a lifelong disorder that causes him to want to sleep if his body is still...driving, watching a movie in theater, etc. He has low blood pressure (which is aided by cycling fitness.) That's why he bikes..it is partially to re-energize his body. He has been tested at a sleep clinic at hospital..twice in his life.[/QUOTE]
Shootingstar that is interesting stuff you mentioned because my father was diagnosed as having narcolepsy and he and I have a lot of similarities to your partner in that regard. My father and I both have low blood pressure and slow heart rate. I too have to be VERY careful driving. When I am tired I have in the past fell asleep at the wheel. I nearly wrecked my car on a handful of occasions. My father DID wreck his car and miraculously survived without a scratch. Apparently a truck driver saw him wreck and the car spun out of control about 6 times before spinning into the median of the interstate. That being said, when I have long trips now I try and take someone with me, drink a lot of coffee or take the cat b/c she meows occasionally and RARELY use the cruise.
I always notice how much more alert I feel after I ride or run. I'm sure other people feel this too but I don't think to the same degree. I say that because sometimes I honestly feel intoxicated some days until I go run or ride. It's strange and a little unnerving since my father was also diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's Disease a few years ago. I really hope those things are not connected.
Hmmmm... have you asked your PCP whether a sleep study is indicated?
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
How old is your father? Does he still drive or what does he do help himself stay safe? I don't he should drive anymore and now with some AZ Disease..
My partner drives a rented car...less than 5 times annually. We haven't had a car since we've known each other...last 22 years. Yes, he used to drink over 10 c. of coffee daily decades ago to stay awake because his job required business trips for site visits at times. He's had his sleep disorder since his late 20's but he was not diagnosed until his late 30's.
When he drove to the side of road with his son, who was then 10 yrs. old, he had no recollection how he got the car there. Then he knew he was endangering himself and everyone else. He lost his appetite for driving much at all.
He has tried prescribed mild narcotic drug to stay awake...but the aftereffects made him feel lousy and he didn't want to get his body hooked on a drug for life. So he abandoned it.
For him to drive 100 km. in a car, it requires him to stop at least once so that he doesn't fall asleep. So moving my stuff from Toronto to Vancouver was a lovely leisurely trip of a lifetime to see Canada...
I'm glad you try hard to stay safe. Seriously, very seriously rethink in the future that you must choose to live near transit, to bike....you have already got into some accidents. So that you can drive less. This is for your own safety. It is a priority since you are still young. (I'm guessing here.)
Please don't use cruise control for the car, not with your condition.
My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.