Q: What is
heart rate?
A: Heart rate is the number of heart beats per minute; the times per minute that the heart
contracts.
Q: What is average heart rate?
A: The average of heart rates measured during an exercise period.
Q: What is recovery heart rate?
A: This is the heart rate that our body will decrease to after an exercise session. For
example, you exercise for a 1/2 hour at 155. Two minutes after you stop exercising, your
heart rate decreases to 95. The 95 would be your recovery heart rate. It is used to
evaluate your fitness level after exercise. It is good to set a two minute time frame and
see how many beats you recover in that time frame. Compare this recover heart rate between
exercise sessions.
Q: What is resting heart rate?
A: Resting heart rate (Resting HR) is the number of beats in one minute when you are at
complete rest. Your resting heart rate indicates your basic fitness level. The more
well-conditioned your body, the less effort and fewer beats per minute it takes your heart
to pump blood to your body at rest.
Q: How do I determine Morning Resting Heart Rate (MRH)?
A: Immediately after awakening and before you get out of bed, measure your heart rate
using your heart rate monitor or from the palpitating pulse from artery, counting the
beats for 15 seconds and multiplying by four. You can sleep with your heart rate monitor
on and in the morning read it first thing. Be aware of the fact that, if your bladder is
full in the morning, you didn't sleep well, or you're feeling stressed, you might have a
slightly elevated resting heart rate. Take these measurements for five consecutive days
and find the average. This average is your actual resting heart rate. Resting heart rate
is dependent on your living habits and a number of factors such as quality of sleep,
stress level, and eating habits.
Q: What is maximum heart rate?
A: Maximum Heart Rate (Max HR) is the highest number of times your heart can contract in
one minute. Max HR is the most useful tool to be used in determining training intensities,
because it can be individually measured or predicted.
Q: How to determine maximum heart rate?
A: You can define your maximum heart rate by
1) having it measured in an exercise test
2) using age-predicted maximum heart rate formulas.
1) Measured Max HR
The most accurate way of determining your individual
maximum heart rate is to have it clinically tested (usually by treadmill stress testing)
by a cardiologist or exercise physiologist. You can also measure it in field conditions
supervised by an experienced coach. If you are over the age of 35, overweight, have been
sedentary for several years, or have a history of heart disease in your family, clinical
testing is recommended.
2) Predicted Maximum HR There is a mathematical formula
that allows you to predict your Max HR with some accuracy. It is called the
"age-adjusted formula". The age-adjusted Max HR formula can come in very handy
when you're not prepared to pay for the physician-supervised stress test.
WOMEN: 226-your age = age-adjusted Max HR
MEN: 220-your age = age-adjusted Max HR
If you are a 30-year-old woman, your age-adjusted maximum
heart rate is 226- 30 years = 196 bpm (beats per minute).
These formulas apply only to adults. The generally
accepted error in age-predicted formulas is + - 10-15 beats per minute, which is due to
different inherited characteristics and exercise training.
You should remember that there may be some discrepancy
when using the age-adjusted formula, especially for people who have been fit for many
years or older people. The formula will give you a ballpark estimate to work from, but if
you want to exercise/train at your most effective levels, your Max HR should be measured.
Q: What is the heart rate reserve?
A: Heart Rate Reserve is the difference between your Maximum Heart Rate and your Resting
Heart Rate. If your maximum heart rate is 196 bpm (beats per minute) and your resting
heart rate 63 bpm, your heart rate reserve is 196 bpm - 63 bpm = 133 bpm.
The greater the difference, the larger your heart rate
reserve and the greater your range of potential training heart rate intensities.
Q: What is safety heart rate?
A: This is the heart rate that is prescribed for beginning exercises - whether a walker,
runner, swimmer, snowshoer, or a participant in any aerobic activity. It is also the term
used in some cardiac rehabilitation programs in which physicians prescribe moderate,
supervised training for recovering heart attack patients. This range is usually 60% (or
less) of the maximum heart rate and represents the least amount of stress you can place on
your heart and still receive a beneficial exercise effect.
Q: What is Max VO2 heart rate?
A: This is the heart rate at which you hit your maximal oxygen uptake effort. On the
average, you hit your Max VO2 HR at 95% of your Max HR.
Q: What is the anaerobic threshold?
A: The physiological point during exercise at which muscles start using up more oxygen
than the body can transport, i.e. muscle work produces more lactic acid/lactate than the
body can process.
Q: What is biofeedback?
A: Visual/numerical information on what is happening inside the body, for instance heart
rate.
Q: What does ECG stand for?
A: It stands for electrocardiogram which is a unit that is used in the medical community
to measure and analyze heart rate. The Polar heart rate monitors all have the same
accuracy rating as the ECG machine.
Q: What is the target zone?
A: A target zone is a heart rate range that guides your workout by keeping your intensity
level between an upper and lower heart rate limit. There are various target zones that are
suggested for an individual to follow that correspond with a specific exercise goal. IE:
Improved Fitness Zone 70-80% of Max Heart Rate.