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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Traveling Nomad
    Posts
    6,763

    New way to calcuate max. HR

    This formula only made 2 bpm difference in mine (age 46), but I found this article interesting:

    Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine
    July 15, 2007

    Rethinking the Maximum Heart Rate Formula

    For more than forty years, fitness instructors have based exercise prescriptions on the maximum heart rate formula of 220 minus your age. A study from Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan shows that this formula may be wrong (Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, May 2007). The researchers found that the original formula overestimated the maximum heart rate for younger exercisers and underestimated the maximum rate for older ones. The new formula they recommend is 206.9 - (age x .67) = maximum heart rate.

    Athletes train by taking a hard workout on one day, feeling sore on the next day, and then going easy for as many days as it takes for the soreness to go away. Then they take another hard workout and repeat the cycle. Most exercise physiologists and coaches tell their conditioned athletes to raise their heart rates to 80 to 100 percent of their maximum when they take a hard
    workout. For people who exercise for fitness, a hard workout usually means exercising at 60 to 80 percent of maximum heart rate. However, the maximum heart rate formulas are set by averages of large populations. Your own maximum heart rate is determined by your fitness level as well as your age. Your legs drive your heart, not the other way around. When you start to
    exercise, your leg muscles contract and squeeze blood from your veins near them. Then when your leg muscles relax, your veins open and fill with blood. This alternate contacting and relaxing of muscles pushes extra blood toward your heart. The increased return of blood to your heart speeds up your heart. People with stronger muscles pump more blood towards their hearts and therefore can get a faster heart rate.

    Since there is huge variation between individuals ranging from competitive athletes to novice exercisers, you would be better off setting your workout level by "perceived exertion", rather than by any formula based on averages. "Perceived exertion" means that your brain interprets how hard your are exercising, and you can respond to these signals. As you exercise more
    intensely, you become short of breath and your muscles start to burn and hurt. You can interpret your own effort and discomfort levels to decide how hard you should work on a hard day or an easy day. People who are just starting an exercise program or who do not exercise regularly should use much lower levels of effort. They should never try to get to their maximum heart rates because they are the ones most likely to suffer heart attacks during exercise. Start any new exercise program slowly and build up your level of fitness gradually.

    Copyright 2007 The Sportsmedicine Institute, Inc.
    www.drmirkin.com
    Emily

    2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Posts
    64
    Thanks for this one. I have been hearing about re-thinking the HR max calc. I have been using his training method of work hard, ride sore & then ride easy for some time now. The results are that I am riding stronger & faster.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Switzerland
    Posts
    2,032
    Using this formula, I get to 184. I know my max is 193 or thereabouts.

    so much for that one - the 220-age (same result) is no more accurate for me.
    It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.

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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    where the wind comes sweeping down the plain
    Posts
    5,251
    Interesting, but I'm the same as Alpine. I know my max is far above the 184 that formula has me at. Why, oh, why can't there be a perfect formula?
    Check out my running blog: www.turtlepacing.blogspot.com

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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Vernon, British Columbia
    Posts
    2,226
    Quote Originally Posted by Tri Girl View Post
    Why, oh, why can't there be a perfect formula?
    Because for every complex problem there is an fast, easy, cheap, solution that's wrong.

    Hugs & butterflies,
    ~T~
    The butterflies are within you.

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  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    425
    I'm similar to Alpine, this formula gives me 186, I can get to 187 doing sprint intervals (running) and not feel like I'm going to die. I think my max is somewhere around 193 or 194.
    The best part about going up hills is riding back down!

 

 

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