Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dr. Mike Nelson on Using Heart Rate Variability to Improve Recovery and Training
Episode Date: January 8, 2020When I first heard about heart rate variability (HRV), I was expecting it to be yet another lame “biohacking” gimmick. The pitch is by analyzing the rhythm of your heart beat with special software..., you can gauge how stressed your body is and adjust accordingly. For instance, if you wake up and your HRV indicates your body is overstressed, you may want to save the heavy squat or deadlift workout for another day, or if your HRV has been off for several days in a row, it might be time to deload or take a diet break or get a little more sleep. Again, it sounds like very fake news, but lo and behold, there’s good evidence of its validity. This is why high-level athletes have been using it for years, and now that the technology has become cheaper, it’s becoming more popular among recreational athletes too. In this episode with HRV expert Dr. Mike Nelson, you’re going to get a crash course in HRV, including how to measure and track your HRV, what lifestyle factors affect it most, how to use it to regulate your training, and more. Let’s dive in. 5:13 - What is heart rate variability? 10:06 - What are the differences between average heart rate and heart rate variability? 15:07 - What do higher and lower levels of heart rate variability indicate? 17:26 - Why is variability affected by the physiology? 25:08 - What affects heart rate variability? 37:36 - Does diet affect heart rate variability? Does caffeine affect HRV as well? 40:02 - How does diet affect heart rate variability? 58:57 - How much does training intensity affect heart rate variability? 01:16:13 - Is there a specific range where you you tell the client to slow down? 01:31:23 - How does nutrition affect heart rate variability? 01:43:54 - How can someone track their heart rate variability? Mentioned on The Show: Dr. Mike Nelson's Website: miketnelson.com/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: legionathletics.com/shop/ Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.legionathletics.com/signup/
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Hey, Mike Matthews here and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life.
This time around, we're going to be talking about heart rate variability or just HRV as
it's often referred to.
Now, when I first heard about this, I was expecting it to be just
another lame biohacking gimmick. The pitch, if you haven't heard it, is that by analyzing the rhythm
of your heartbeat with special software, you can gauge how stressed your body is, and then you can
adjust accordingly. So for example, if you wake up in the morning and your hrv indicates that
your body is overstressed you may want to save the heavy squat or the heavy deadlift workout for
another day or if your hrv has been off for several days in a row it might be time to deload
or to take a diet break if you're cutting or get a bit more sleep or eat a bit
more food. Now, again, that sounds unlikely to pan out, but lo and behold, there's actually
good evidence supporting the use of HRV. And this is why high level athletes have been using it for
quite some time now, for years. And now that the technology has become cheaper,
it's becoming more common among recreational athletes, including weightlifters as well.
And in this episode with HRV expert, Dr. Mike Nelson, you're going to get a crash course in
HRV, including how to correctly measure and track your HRV because there are several options out there
and some are better than others.
What lifestyle factors affect HRV the most?
How to use HRV to regulate your training and more.
I hope you enjoy this interview.
Here it is.
Hey, Mike, thanks for taking the time to be my guest today.
Yeah, thank you very much for having me on here. I really appreciate it.
Yeah, I'm excited for today's talk because it is something that is fairly mainstream that I
haven't written or spoken about at all, I think, which is hard to do. It's hard to find something
that I haven't at least touched on, and that is heart rate variability. And I guess the reason why is I haven't looked into it all that much myself. I did play around
with it a bit, I want to say a year, year and a half ago, did just did some cursory research,
read some basic stuff about it. Okay, I understand the theory, that's interesting,
and found that my HRV was more or less always in the same range, regardless of whether I slept better
or worse or trained harder or not so hard. And I was like, oh, okay. Anyway, moving on,
which is not to say it's not useful. I just dabbled in it. I didn't make a real experiment of
it. And who introduced me? I think it was Mike Ruscio, right? Who introduced us. And then HRV
came. I was like, oh, that's the perfect topic and something that you know a lot about. So here we are.
Awesome. Out of curiosity, at the risk of derailing everything, what HRV system did you use?
That's a good question. So I had a chest strap monitor. I don't remember the brand. I could
probably, maybe when you're talking, I'll pull up on Amazon. I think I bought it on Amazon.
And I had an app, my brain's saying Elite HRV.
Is that even an app? I actually don't even know. It was an Android app.
Oh, gotcha. Yeah, they had one of the early Android ones. And yeah, we'll get into position
and some other stuff on that too, because there are some things that obviously can affect it.
And not seeing a change is interesting. So it could be a couple of things.
So yeah.
I guess there were slight differences, but it was usually around the same score.
I want to say, again, it was a bit ago.
I might have seen something in the 50s.
I thought that I remember that standing out as I was kind of interesting, but I think
it was generally in the 70s to 80s, if that makes any sense.
Again, it was a while ago.
And each can have their own little scale.
Yeah. Anyways, we can get to that, I guess, when we get there in the discussion. But I think we
should start with just a simple explanation of what this is. What is heart rate variability?
Yeah. So, the more technical definition is a lot of people are used to looking at what is your average heart rate, right?
Especially now with, you know, watches.
I have a Garmin watch, Apple watch, whatever.
Take your pick.
Or even if you can debate accuracy about it, but treadmills will give you a resting heart rate and exercise heart rate and all that kind of stuff.
Your phone too, right?
I mean, you put your finger up to the light, right?
Yeah, your phone will give you one.
So most people are used to seeing average heart rate. So, when we talk about heart rate variability,
we're actually talking about how much your heart rate varies just a little bit from one beat to
the next or what's called a variability analysis. And when we do this kind of fancy math,
this variability analysis, which there's
a bunch of different ways to do it, and we're not going to bore people with a discussion about
nonlinear, linear math, time domain, blah, blah, blah. It gives us a marker of the status of your
autonomic nervous system. So your listeners are probably familiar with that. It has two branches.
One is the parasympathetic branch and one is the sympathetic
branch. So I always tell clients, imagine the parasympathetic branch is like the brake on your
car. I push down harder on the brake pedal. I increase the force of the brake and the car
slows down. So paradoxically, I increase something which is called vagal tone,
I've increased parasympathetic tone, just like stepping on the brake on my car,
my heart rate is going to go down. And my HRV will actually reflect a change in that. So the
parasympathetic nervous system is primarily your rest and digest and recovery branch of the nervous
system. On the other side, we have the sympathetic
nervous system, which is like the gas pedal in the car. If I step down harder on it, it's going to
go faster. I do things to increase sympathetic tone. My heart rate is going to speed up and some
other changes are going to happen also. So the nice part about heart rate variability is it's a pretty good marker for
the status of where that autonomic nervous system is. How much am I parasympathetic in relation to
how much am I sympathetic? And it's more like a dimmer switch on a light and not necessarily an
on or off switch. So you always have some parasympathetic, you always have some
sympathetic, that's more like a ratio of the two. And when we look at HRV, we do that, let's say,
first thing in the morning, that gives a status of where your autonomic nervous system is.
And obviously, that can be changed by a whole bunch of things. Be changed by sleep, nutrition, practical dark discussion is training, even different
types of training, aerobic, anaerobic, different types of intervals, etc.
And the end goal is initially was proposed to predict performance, which we can discuss
and the data on that is kind of split at best.
But what I found it was most useful for
was having a marker of the level of stress that a client was under. Most of my clients,
especially now, are all online clients. So I don't really have the luxury of seeing them,
you know, walk into a gym like I did in the past. I don't get to watch their movement. I don't get
to watch their breathing, their interaction, their eye movements, all the other stuff that, you know, a lot of coaches and trainers do almost unconsciously
to kind of figure out where the status is and where they're at. Obviously, watching their
performance, bar, execution, speed, velocity, things of that nature. I don't really have the
luxury of getting all of those things unless you want to get pretty complicated with some other
measuring devices. But I can have them sit down and do this HRV measurement in the morning.
Some devices will run overnight.
Some will take two to four minutes to run in the morning.
And I can have a snapshot of where their autonomic nervous system is at that point in time.
And that gives me some idea of how their body is responding to all the different stimulation going on.
And based on that, we can decide, you know, maybe we'll go with what we have planned today.
Maybe we'll make some changes.
Maybe we'll run it for a couple of weeks to get a good baseline.
And there's different variation and permutations you can run from there.
But what I really like is that it's a relatively easy thing to get.
It's non-invasive, doesn't cost any money each time you run it.
You don't need a saliva cortisol sample to be run to a lab to see where you're at.
I can get a very good idea of the status of your nervous system just by doing this measurement once a day,
usually first thing in the morning. And I may have missed it, but did you clarify the difference
between just heart rate or average rate and then heart rate variability? Because many people,
they don't, that gets mixed up. Yep. So, it definitely gets confusing. So, when we look at
heart rate variability, so how this works is and how I
got into it initially was years ago, I did my undergrad, I did a master's in mechanical
engineering. I spent about another five years in PhD program in biomedical engineering at the
University of Minnesota. I ended up dropping out of that program entirely because I literally did
not want to do any more math. I had a minor in math. I'd taken three more math classes, you know, beyond Calc 4, which I didn't even think there was math that existed beyond
Calculus 4. And I'm like, man, I don't want to do this anymore. So, I ended up pulling the plug on
that, dropped out. I go over to the physiology department that fall, and I literally sit down
for like the first meeting we have. My new advisor in the exercise physiology department's like, hey, we got two new projects.
One's on heart rate variability and one's on metabolic flexibility.
And they both involve math.
And he's looking around the table.
And, you know, most people, even at a high level in exercise phys, you know, math isn't something that you take a lot of.
It's just not part of the curriculum.
Sub areas there are. But in general general it's not really a huge requirement and he looks at me and he's
like hey you math boy whatever your name is like these are your projects now right that's what you
i'm trying to escape this shitting me like i come all the way over here i was trying to avoid math
and now i get more math and so at the time we had to bring people into the lab. We had bought
this equipment used, which cost us about 12 grand to get. And we had to run these measurements. We
had to run them through two systems. I had to create a custom MATLAB code to do this and drop
it into Kubios. A lot of monkey motion. And even if you had all that, you had someone to do that,
it wasn't super useful because you had to come into a lab in order to get a measurement done.
And with HRV, you kind of want to know, well, how does it change from one day to the next?
We were doing an intervention study related to energy drinks and some other stuff.
And so fast forward a couple of years after that, one of the first companies, iFleet, came out with a system to just run it on your smartphone.
I think the app at that time was $8, which is I think the same price it is now.
And it runs off of a Bluetooth heart rate strap.
So you would get up in the morning, you would turn on the app, you would hook up this heart rate strap.
And the app, because it's basically a smart computer, will crunch all of the data and all of the numbers and everything in the background
for you. So what that's actually doing is it's taking about a 55 second period and it's looking
at one beat to the next beat. So if we have one person sitting in a chair and for the sake of
simplicity, let's just look at it in terms of beats per minute. And we have super accurate
equipment and we're measuring the resting heart rate just seated in a chair. We're watching the numbers go by on the screen as it records.
Oh, it's 65.1. Oh, it's 66.7. Ooh, 68.1, 65.4, 64.9. There's a little bit of this variation
from one beat to the next compared to someone who's 65.2, 65.5, 64.9, right? They're not having
as much of that little variation from one what's called R wave to the next R wave. So the electrical
contraction of the ventricle because that's what's easiest to pick up on the EKG and for the algorithms to pick up. So what that tells us then is that little bit of variation from one R wave to the next,
that gives us information about the status of the autonomic nervous system.
So if we have someone, we measure just the average heart rate, like old school numbers
that are easy to get, that gives us some information, right? We know
that if you have a higher heart rate, probably have some more sympathetic output, right? You're
jamming down on that gas pedal of the car a little harder, or you've also pulled off of the brake.
But it doesn't tell us anything more beyond that. It's very much a crude marker. With HR-V,
because we're looking at that fine scale variability, that
little bit of difference from one R wave to the next, when we run that variability analysis,
kind of that next level down of math, we can get a much more better picture of the status of that
autonomic nervous system. Because remember, both branches are kind of running all of the time.
So it'd be like a race car driver or rally car driver driving around with one foot on
the brake and one foot on the gas.
By doing that, I can get a little bit different combinations, even though the speed of the
car, if I were to measure it, may be the same.
And how you get that average heart rate, that's what HRV will tell you, kind of what sort
of percentage of that is more
parasympathetic and what is more on the sympathetic side. And what do high or higher and lower levels
of variability indicate? You had mentioned it in terms of nervous system activity, but maybe also
just in terms of, does it mean that your body is under more stress? Does it mean you
are maybe not recovering from your workouts? Again, these are just questions that I'm asked
about it. So I'm just passing them along. Yeah. Yeah. So as the variability gets less,
that is an indicator that your body has a higher sympathetic tone or is in a more stressed
situation.
If you go back in time, there was an old Chinese proverb that said, you know, if you listen
to his heartbeat and it sounds like a metronome, you know, death is very close, right?
If you have that metronomic that you're hitting that exact same heart rate every single beat,
you have very, very little fine scale variability. You're under very
high levels of sympathetic stress. And we know from studies that for mortality, that's not very
good, right? Your risk of dying goes up dramatically. Which sounds kind of counterintuitive
because we always think of the heart of this machine that runs very precisely, which it does, but this is where less precision per se is a good
indicator and or at least conformity is a good indicator and exact repetition is a bad indicator.
Yeah. So, I would even go farther and argue that almost all physiologic systems we've looked at have some
level of fine scale variability. And every time that that fine scale variability is lost, you're
kind of going in the wrong direction. Whether we watch somebody's sway, we watch gait, there's some
stuff with breathing mechanics, I was doing some stuff looking at fuel usage, how micro changes in
fat and carbohydrate use via metabolic heart
may be a marker for metabolic flexibility. So my PhD was looking at basically fine scale
variability across physiologic systems. So can we use these fine little changes to non-invasively
extract some information about the system, knowing that in the case of heart rate, as it becomes that more metronome-like,
that is a movement in the wrong direction. And why is that physiologically without getting
too deep into the weeds? I'm just curious. Yeah. So, if we take a short trip down the
rabbit hole and you're like, well, wait a minute, how the hell does that even happen, right? So,
we set aside that fine scale variability is a good
thing, if we look at HRV and we go, okay, what are we actually trying to measure? Like, yeah, yeah,
you said we're measuring the R-waves, right? So, everyone's seeing their EKG. We see the big spiky
pointy thing, which is the R-wave, which is a representation of the QRS complex, which is
looking at electrical movement through the ventricle, the bottom chambers of the QRS complex, which is looking at electrical movement through the
ventricle, the bottom chambers of the heart. It's much easier to see than the P wave, which is the
atrial or the top chambers, because the ventricle is much bigger, we have longer time that the
current electricity has to pass through. So when we look at it on something like an EKG,
it's easier to see. For HRV, we actually want to know what's going on in the
atrium. And specifically, we want to know what's going on with something called the sinoatrial
node. So there's a little group of cells in the atrium in the top chamber of the heart. And if we
pull these cells out and we put them in a Petri dish and we have them beat on their own, they'll
actually go at a rate of around 100, right?
These cells are programmed to do what's called a depolarization at a rate of 100.
If we pull cells out of the very bottom part of the ventricle,
those cells will spontaneously go off at a rate of around 40, right?
So just think of it as your heart always has these kind of cells as a backup system.
Because if you lose your heart, right, don't have a heartbeat,
a lot of bad stuff's going to happen, you know, not very good for your survival. But most people sitting around,
even at rest, even if they haven't been training, they're, you know, kind of a little bit
deconditioned, the resting heart rate is not 100, right? It's, you know, 60, 70, you know,
somewhere around there. So, most of the time what's happening is you're under what's called
a vagal stimulation, right? So, most people now may have heard of the vagal nerve, which is very popular, kind of called the Wannery nerve. And it comes into the SA node. And when it
stimulates the SA node, just like pushing down harder on that brake of the car, it's actually
decreasing heart rate. So most of the time when you're at rest, you're under some kind of vagal stimulation.
You're driving your car around, pushing down on the brake of the car to slow it down.
And the more vagal stimulation that we have, that is a marker for parasympathetic activation.
Our heart rate is going to go down and our variability, our fine scale variability will actually go up. So if you think back and
you go, okay, so this thing literally has like a one cell intervention. The vagal nerve is able to
fine tune the heart within milliseconds. So when we look at an EKG, we measure the distance from
one R wave to the next. that's usually done in milliseconds you divide
through by 60,000 you get your beats per minute is the r-wave the large peak or no is that the p-wave
yep the r-wave is the big large peak and the reason they pick that is because it's just easy
to pick up on most equipment the p-wave is really small and really hard to get so you end up with a
whole bunch of noise and a bunch of other issues. As long as they've got normal cardiac physiology, it doesn't matter which
one you pick, they're both going to give you the same level of information. If you start getting
into pathologies and stuff like that, you can see really wonky HRV just because you're kind of not
measuring the thing you want to. So when we get these R waves, you're like, okay, so we can see
these millisecond difference from one r wave
to the next so the hard part with hrv is you have to be accurate picking off these r waves literally
within a few milliseconds because otherwise the information you're trying to extract is just going
to get lost in a bunch of noise right and that's why the system that you use which we'll get into
does matter because we need to be pretty accurate with those. That's just because the distinctions are that
slight, right? I mean, that is the level of variability. It's not changing by several
beats or something. No, it's not seconds, it's milliseconds. And that's why I made getting
consumer-grade tech a little bit harder because if you get noise, you get other things that show up,
you need something to measure these things pretty accurately. So now if we back up and we go, okay,
wait a minute, wait a minute, what's going on with the sympathetic system, right? So I said
there's two branches. There's the parasympathetic, which is primarily controlled by this vagal nerve
coming into the SA node, kind of the clock keeper of the heart rate of the heart, and that gets
distributed to the rest of the cardiac tissue.
So the sympathetic side, while there's different ways it can be controlled, one of the fastest ways to get your heart rate to 100 is just let off the brake, right? So just rapidly change that amount
of vagal tone on the SA node and I get very fast changes up to a rate of 100. So if you ever want to play around with stuff,
you'll notice that under a rate of 100, it's relatively easy to kind of change your heart
rate. So an example you can do is even have like an Apple Watch or something like that,
and practice breathing in and breathing out at different rates, because your breath will
actually change your heart rate ever so slightly.
And if you've got an accurate system, you can play around with very long exhales that increases
parasympathetic tone and actually will dramatically drop your heart rate literally within like one or
two beats. So very, very fast. The sympathetic system, however, is mainly governed by the adrenal system by a hormonal
system so most people are aware of this if you for example if you've ever almost had a car accident
or something really stressful happened to you you have it go by it feels like time kind of slows
down and let's say it was only like a one second event if you pay attention you'll notice your
heart rate will start going super high a couple seconds after that it's not immediate because if
we want to get heart rate well over 100 what do we have to do we have to get the adrenals to dump
out a bunch of adrenaline epinephrine norepinerine. Those have to travel through the bloodstream. They have to bind to specific cardiac receptors on the cardiac heart tissue itself and activate, you know, for example,
beta-1, beta-2, beta-3 agonists on the heart tissue. And this causes an increased contraction
and will bump up your heart rate. But that relies on a couple second delay because it's done by the hormonal system.
They have to come through the bloodstream and bind and do all this kind of stuff.
It's not actually as precise as the vagal system, which is literally right next to that SA node.
So if you want to get like really down in the weeds and get really hyper specific, if you're doing an HRV measurement and most of the measurement systems now do something
called the time domain analysis you don't need to worry about but they're literally just looking at
that vagal control of the heart and that gives us some idea of hrv and some idea of how much of that
sort of parasympathetic do we have because remember we always have of parasympathetic do we have? Because remember, we always have some parasympathetic and some sympathetic.
But the HRV, those very, very small changes, because this is being done at rest,
is really looking at primarily that kind of vagal control of the heart
if you want to get really down in the nitty-gritty.
The end result is you're still getting a very accurate
marker of the status of that autonomic nervous system. That makes sense. And what affects HRV?
What types of things are the major factors that increase or decrease variability in heart rate?
Yeah. So lots of things do, which is both cool and maddening for people who train, right?
Because when I first started, I was like, oh, it's HRV.
It's just so cool.
I'm going to have a non-invasive marker that's only going to respond to training because
training is obviously a stressor.
And I started doing it and I'm like, oh, wait a minute.
Oh, oh, breathing can change it, right?
Because our breath, the lung function has to be coupled to cardiac function.
What do we have to do?
We have to get carbon dioxide out of cells.
We've got to get oxygen to the cells.
That includes the cells of the cardiac tissue.
So we want some rhythm to be happening between the lungs and the heart.
So like I said, you can play around with different breathing.
That's why if you do meditation or you want to be in a more calm state,
sometimes people will tell you to take a very long
exhale. So what that's doing, that increases that vagal tone and drops your heart rate.
There's the box breathing method too. I remember reading about that. It was like marketed as like,
this is the weird trick Navy SEALs use to keep cool under fire.
But I mean, I don't know if it was Mark i actually but but that was it was like you know some medium article or something a clickbait title but it was just if i remember correctly it was
four seconds uh inhale four seconds hold four seconds exhale something like that yeah so a box
breathing is you're specifying inhale hold exhale hold all right there was a hold at the end yeah yeah yeah and you can that would
have been a triangle mine would have been triangle breathing yeah triangle breathing
hey that's your new one i'm gonna market that yeah so lots of stuff affects hrv which in one
way is good right because if nothing acutely affected our hrv like why the hell would we
measure it each day like what good is it not
all that useful then right now you get a marker baseline once in a while and you're good to go
right you don't don't worry about it but you can't then use it to navigate training changes day to
day or week to week the downside is that because so many things do change it examples would be
breathing hydration will make a massive change to your HRV, which is something people
forget about, which is also why alcohol can change HRV, both from alcohol itself, possible dehydration
effects, different types of alcohol, sleep, nutrition, mental state, pretty much anything,
right? Because the autonomic nervous system is controlling a lot of those different things.
thing, right? Because autonomic nervous system is controlling a lot of those different things.
HRV is giving us a status of the ANS, automatic nervous system. Therefore, lots of things can change it. So then in practice, how do you make that useful? So my bias is doing an HRV measurement,
usually just one time a day, doing it when you have the most stable period before it, right?
Because remember, I said all these different things can change that measurement. So, in the
morning, unless you have been doing too much Ambien and making bacon and eggs at three in the morning,
or there's like case reports of people painting their house and driving and doing all sorts of
crazy shit, you probably have a very stable period, at least one that's going to be for your physiology, probably replicated, you know, one night after the next,
assuming length of sleep is about the same conditions are the same. So when you get up in
the morning, I tell people just use the bathroom if you need to sit back down. Most people will do
the measurement in a seated fashion, which we'll come back to why that's important. Put the
measurement on whatever system you're using. For single point measurements, I still like using the iFleet system.
Instead of iFleet, it's an eye and stabilize your breathing. So just sit there for a minute or two,
just breathe normal because you want to be in a rested state and then hit start. On the iFleet
app, it will pace your breathing. It'll say, okay, breathe in here and then breathe out there.
Remember we said breathing can change HRV.
So my bias is I like to haste breathing when I collect the measurement
because I want that breathing to be the same every time it's collected
so I can compare one day to the next.
And then most systems will give you a score on the top.
The hard part is some of those scores usually will be on their own kind of proprietary scale.
In the case of iFleet, they did that just to make it more useful. So they use their own kind of proprietary scale. In the case of Ithly, they did
that just to make it more useful. So they use like a one to a hundred scale. And on their scale,
the higher the number, the more parasympathetic you are, right? So the more fine scale variability
you have. So for example, this morning I was 84, the previous day i was 81 so i was more sympathetic yesterday with 81
than i was today at 84 so a lower score indicates a higher level of sympathetic activation or for
lack of simple term stress yeah less variability i'm sorry less variability a lower score right
yeah yeah and that's that's what kind of trips people up a little bit.
And on the athlete, they have little indicators that you can move yourself.
It's a little essay, hey, I wanted to scale here.
How is your energy?
How is your mood?
How is your muscle soreness?
And so it gives you a context that clients I work with will then rate.
So when I collect their data, maybe if we're doing some very in-depth stuff for tapers, getting ready for competition, I may collect that daily. Most of the time,
I'll just collect it weekly. I can then go back and look and I have a context now of sleep and
other things that may affect HRV. Because to me, HRV is not super useful without the context of
what else is going on because there's too many things
that affect it right i mean it went down we're not happy about that but why right yep and the
first thing i'm going to look at then is what did they report on that context oh wow they reported
their sleep was red for the last three nights okay that definitely can be a stressor so that's
probably what's going to go on so i'm going going to ask him like, hey, what happened? What time did you go to bed? You know,
I couldn't sleep because the dog was barking or whatever it was, right? So now it gives me a
coaching thing of which I can do some type of intervention. They say was, oh, it was nutrition.
I decided to do a fast for three and a half days and didn't tell you, you know, whatever.
It gives you a way to start a conversation,
which to me I find is super useful because the assumption is that most people would be really
good at rating their stress. And what I found is most people are utterly horrible at doing that.
You know, yeah, if you're an elite athlete, you probably have a pretty good idea of what's going
on. A lot of other people, probably not, right?
Because I used to have all these arguments with clients.
I'd be like, okay, we're talking about eight years ago.
Hey, we're talking about sleep and all this stuff.
They're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I get it.
Okay, write down what time you go to bed, what time you get up.
And what I found was they're just like, oh, man, I went to bed at at five again didn't matter what i did nothing changed and i'm trying to explain to them that
you know this is a source of stress you know for your life you're living on four cups of coffee
yeah you train hard but i was listening to a trainer have this exact discussion like a moment
it's like deja vu moment just a few days ago they were taught i was just at the bench next to the
the client and it was the same thing
like okay so how did it go last night oh terrible went to bed well woke up at four uh whatever i
don't know like yeah and it's the weirdest thing because you're sitting this one i did in person
stuff i'm sitting in front of the client and they are verbally agreeing that yeah i agree i need
more sleep yep coach you're totally right totally. But they would do nothing about it. It's almost like it subconsciously didn't register.
So once I started doing HRV, I started having some of those same conversations. And then I
got really frustrated. And I just said, screw this. So I just put a graph. Here's your HRV.
Looks like a ski slope headed straight to hell. Here's your sleep report. Looks like the same
thing. I put them both like the same thing i put
them both on the same page and i send it to the client i go hey what do you think's going on and
you know i'm like thinking i know what's going on but like maybe they're just oblivious and i just
did it more out of frustration than anything else and they wrote back they're like oh my god oh my
god you're telling me that like when i get like five hours of sleep for three nights in a row i get really stressed i'm like yeah and they're like oh i never realized this and i'm thinking we've talked about
this for like three months you know this is not like this shouldn't be a revelation at this point
but there was something about seeing the data that was based on their physiology
and then their next question was oh what do i do I do about it? Oh, perfect. I'm so glad
you finally asked. So I use it mostly to drive with a lot of clients just awareness and try to
get them to maintain some ownership over it and also to look at the response.
Yeah. Well, it's nice that it's hard data. It's something quantitative that you can say, look,
see this right here?
Here's what this means.
You see what you're doing there and how it makes that number worse.
That is something that is, it's just more impactful than just talking about abstract
downsides to not sleeping enough, for example, especially when it's something in connection
with stress, which can be completely subjective in some ways where you put one person in a situation and ask like,
how stressed do you feel? And they go, oh, it's so overwhelming. And then the other person
in the same exact situation, same circumstances, and they're like, yeah, it's not a big deal.
Yeah, because our nervous system operates on a comparative state primarily. So for example,
if you were to come visit me, I do some hands-on stuff, some be activated RPR work. And my goal of those sessions is to work
on a lot of breathing, do some work on clients. But my goal is to build up the biggest differential.
So when they get up off the table and walk around, they're like, whoa, this feels like
totally different, right? Because if I can get them to feel different, independent of whatever tests I'm using, they realize that there was a difference. And they're probably bought into,
you know, how I show them how to do the exercise and do the activations themselves,
right? Just be like, I live in Minnesota. And if it's 20 below Fahrenheit in the winter,
when you're outside and you walk in, and it's 65 degrees in my townhouse, you're like, oh,
man, this feels amazing. it's 65 degrees in my townhouse, you're like, oh man, this feels
amazing. It's so warm in here. That's just a little marketing tip out there. If you are wanting
to get people interested in whatever you have to sell, if you can deliver quick results, what is
a magic bullet that you can actually deliver on? You're not going to magic bullet fix some big
thing or deliver all of what you can deliver, of course.
But what's just something you can give them that gets a result very quickly, that gets people's attention.
Yeah, because they can feel it, right?
So, you know, we can argue later about science and everything, which I love.
But for most people, because they're humans, you know, feeling is believing.
And that can go astray just as well as it can go right. But if you get them to feel that difference that registered, because that's a huge comparison.
So if I was sitting in my townhouse all day and it's 65 degrees, I might be like, huh,
you know, it feels a little bit cold in here. All right. But I walk outside to the mailbox and come
in and go, oh my God, it's super warm in here. It the same temperature right i just all of a sudden had that massive amount of comparison so trying to to build those things up and using hrv i like to use it as
an educational tool to show them that hey here's how you feel which is different and then in a
perfect world which doesn't always work if i can get an intervention build up a bigger differential on the other side,
that would be better. Now, sleep is very hard, but in a perfect world, I would say, okay,
I want you to go to bed two hours earlier and fall asleep and go from sleeping five hours a
night to seven and a half hours a night, right? That's a pretty big difference. They do that for
four days in a row. They're definitely going to feel a difference, probably feel a difference the
next time they wake up in the morning. So, using to build up, I think bigger, like you said,
differentials is beneficial. But before you can do that, you have to have some level of awareness.
And I think you have to have the client or the athlete bought in and ideally asking you,
oh, hey, coach, what do I do now about this? Because if they're asking, that means they at
least know
there's something that they want to change. You can talk about the trans-theoretical model of
change and all this kind of stuff, but they are probably much more willing to do a specific action
now than they were before. Makes sense. How do dietary factors, what type of influences have
you seen there? There may not be anything
significant. I'm just curious whether it be, let's say, low carb versus higher carb,
even certain types of foods. I mean, it wouldn't be like probably one,
oh, I had a hamburger last night. No, but tending to eat certain types of foods consistently.
What about caffeine? I'm sure plenty of people are wondering about that.
consistently. What about caffeine? I'm sure plenty of people are wondering about that.
Yeah, so we'll do caffeine first. Caffeine is an interesting one. One of the studies I did was looking at the effect of Monster Energy Drink on HRV, a bunch of different measures, performance,
outcomes, well, technically, a ride time to exhaustion. It's not really performance,
but it's a measure of fatigue that's been used classically for caffeine research back into the 70s, 80s, 90s.
And in that study, we did not really see a big change in HRV, although we did see a change
in resting heart rate.
You know, ride time to exhaustion was pretty mixed.
You can get into the specifics of how much caffeine was used and things of that nature.
The caffeine itself is a stimulant, right?
It's working primarily off of adenosine receptors, which in essence is kind of masking your need
for sleep.
So, if you look at cognitive function in caffeine, most of the study, if they are sleep deprived,
caffeine will temporarily kind of ameliorate the effects you see up to a point with a little
bit of sleep loss or even sometimes frank sleep deprivation
in terms of performance right most people you've had podcast guests talk about this before
strength and power you're looking at you know two megs per kg up to maybe six megs per kg
so if you're at say six milligrams per kg you're a 220 pound mammal so you're 100 kg
that's 600 milligrams of caffeine at once right so it's pretty high
you're gonna be hopped up yeah and you can go too far on that right so you take too much caffeine
it goes from being ergogenic helping performance to actually ergolytic detracting from performance
that's interesting i didn't know that and that's like directly physiologically or just because you
feel like shit both right and it depends on what skill you're doing too, right? So, if you ask someone who's
taking way too much caffeine, they just, they feel jittery, they don't feel good. Sometimes
they perform a little bit better. It depends on the individual. But I found if you're a high level,
say power lifter, and you've got squat bench and dead, and you're pretty locked in on your form,
with those athletes, I'll actually slowly bump up their caffeine quite a bit more to some pretty high doses if you're an olympic
weightlifter yeah much more cautious right because now you've got much more of a skill component
involved in there and we see similar effects with heart rate right so if you go to an olympic
weightlifting meet especially at a high level you don't see any lifters in the back slapping each other on the head or the back or the ass and like, you know, really getting into it and headbutting each other and whatever.
Pretty calm, right?
Because as heart rate gets higher, look at the kind of arousal spectrum, heart rate will increase basically gross motor skills.
So kind of that raw output,
but fine motor skills start to go down, right?
So Olympic weightlifting has more
of a fine motor skill component than powerlifting.
My hypothesis is that caffeine
kind of does something similar.
If you're an advanced athlete,
you know, more speed and power,
probably handle a little bit higher dosage of caffeine.
But for everyone, at some point,
if you take in
too much, especially acutely, performance actually starts going down the other way.
When we look at heart rate variability, if you get to a high enough dose of caffeine,
yep, HRV will actually start to go down, right? Because you are driving that sort of sympathetic
side through a different mechanism. However, if you're at lower doses, the research is really
across the board. And the time course of when you pick to measure HRV matters also. So if you take a
dose, let's say of just old school and high-risk caffeine, just pure caffeine and a powder or pill
or whatever, and I measure at 30 minutes, you can have a little bit more of a parasympathetic
increase. If I measure again at 60 minutes, I'm now more on the sympathetic side.
Peak levels of caffeine are usually looking at 30 to 60 minutes on an empty stomach
is when you'll see peak blood levels.
So it's pretty mixed.
There's some unpublished data that we'll have coming out this fall
where we were dosing people with coffee and trying to standardize for caffeine
and looking at just HRV measurements.
And these are in young, healthy college students. And kind of the takeaway, although it hasn't been
published yet, is it may not really affect them that much. Up to what amount, just out of curiosity?
What are your thoughts on that, at least? Is there a point where, so a few guys in the office here, they probably
run on average, let's say between 400 and 600 milligrams per day. And I hear from quite a few
people that are in the same range, if not higher. I'm just curious if in your experience and in
your research, there's a point where you, in most people, it starts to
consistently lower that variability at certain ranges, or is it just all over the place? Because
then there's also just individual factors in play of how do people's bodies respond to caffeine?
Yeah. So the answer is we have no idea.
Interesting. Have you seen that in some people, lower amounts have that effect?
Yeah. In other people, it amounts have that effect? Yeah.
In other people, it's higher amounts. So, okay. So, it really is kind of a personal thing.
Yeah. So, what I've seen is there's a bunch of factors. So, tolerance to caffeine probably
matters. The type of caffeine, is it in coffee? Is it an energy drink? Is it just pure anhydrous?
Probably matters. Dosing during the day will matter, right right because imagine if you're taking a very high
dose in the evening because you lift in the evening yeah messing up your sleep you mess up
sleep and depending upon how fast you clear caffeine which you can look at different genetic
testing for that you may still have smaller levels of caffeine by the time you do another test in the
morning probably didn't sleep at all that night either And the other part too is that if you're a healthy person and you're training hard
and you're taking it, let's say, in the afternoon, my guess, and this is based on very limited
unpublished data, it may not matter all that much. Now, the big caveat with this is in the real world,
I can normally draw an almost linear
correlation between amount of caffeine somebody consumes, the amount of stress in their life,
and how little sleep they get.
Most people, as caffeine intake goes up, their stress went up and their sleep usually goes
to crap.
So, now when I run an HRV measurement...
Or they're just not sleeping enough and they use caffeine as the crutch to get
by yeah exactly so now when i measure hrv i do see that they are more stressed but was that the
caffeine was that the sleep was that the outside other stressors they have going on is it a
combination of everything um probably a combination of everything and then the last point too is that the form of caffeine
will matter quite a bit so there's some early studies looking at this at caffeine in the form
of coffee versus just anhydrous caffeine and you're like well what you know what's the difference
well coffee has other polyphenols different compounds in it that have different beneficial effects.
There's also a very high neurologic association with coffee, right?
So if I ask you, when do you typically drink coffee?
What would you say?
I'm assuming you drink coffee.
Yeah, I have a couple shots of espresso in the morning after I work out.
I don't do any before because I like to keep my caffeine intake relatively low these days.
So for me to really notice the difference in my training, I'd have to take quite a bit anyway. And I wouldn't want
to take four or five, 600 milligrams. So is it really worth having 150 milligrams before? Nah.
So I just do stim-free pre-workout and have my caffeine after.
Okay, cool. So in your case, because that's when you typically consume caffeine in the form of coffee we may actually see more
parasympathetic tone compared to a buddy who does two or three shots of espresso before heavy
deadlift day right in that state of whether doing it beforehand they have all sorts of you know
neurologic associations with it's part of their pre-workout ritual they're getting amped up they're
doing some visualization whatever whatever, right?
So just the smell of the coffee will trigger those associations under what conditions you've
habitually consumed it.
We don't really have that with like an anhydrous form of caffeine.
So when you look at the research on coffee, you have to, one, look at the caffeine content,
right?
And then another bugger with that is that the caffeine content of coffee can vary like crazy there's an old study from researcher mccuster
and he took one of his grad students he sent them to starbucks every day during the same time the
same starbucks the same you know medium whatever they call it i think it was a day break coffee
he just brought him back to the lab and they just ran HPLC analysis on caffeine content. What they found was it varied by well over 200%.
Wow. Holy shit. What? That's wild.
Yeah. I'll send you the study. So you're like, well, wait a minute. This is from a company that
is known to have very high standardization because you want the same experience no matter
what Starbucks you go to. They're doing everything they can to keep their process very similar,
but yet we see pretty dramatically different levels of caffeine just in a coffee type beverage.
So, when you read the study, you want to look to see did they analyze the specific caffeine
content in there, not just standardizing the type of coffee. And you have the different neuronal associations with it. And so it gets to be kind of messy in terms of the
answer of does it have an effect or not. What I tell people in practice is just get a rough idea
of how many milligrams of caffeine you consume. You're not going to be super accurate on it,
but you can get close and then see if that's
associated with hrv at all like in my case i've actually started playing around with days i'm
doing heavier training of actually increasing my caffeine content and it doesn't seem to affect my
hrv the next day the caveat being if i have it early enough in the day, and I do a fair amount for whatever reason, higher volume.
Like if I just have a lot of caffeine and do a very short session, it appears to affect my
HRV a little bit more in the next day. Again, and a one completely anecdotal. So hypothetically,
maybe something about doing work, you're expending energy, which we know may increase
parasympathetic tone, right? Doing exercise,
depending on the type of exercise and how you respond can change your autonomic nervous system.
So yeah, so I tell people just to play around with it.
Tell the body that, okay, we need some time to settle down now. We have to recover from this.
Yeah. And at the risk of making it really complicated, I did an experiment like five
years ago when I started playing around with daily HRV. And my hypothesis, which was in error at the risk of making it really complicated, I did an experiment like five years ago when I started playing around with daily HRV.
And my hypothesis, which was in error at the time, was, OK, if I am more parasympathetic the next day on HRV, cool, I'm more recovered.
Right. But I didn't pay attention to the deviation of how much higher I went from the norm.
So idiot me, I was, you know, doing the
strongman event and I didn't have any way of training implements. I'm in my garage. So I'm
like, okay, I'm just gonna put 225 on the trap bar and I'm going to do reps of, you know, 20 to 25
for multiple sets, which it's fricking horrible. Sucks. I did that. And the next day I'm like,
oh my God, my HRV went up 11 points this is crazy you know a couple days go by do it
again and my hrv went up nine points again wow so idiot me goes oh maybe this is some new type
of recovery work anyone who's listening to this would go that's the dumbest thing i've ever heard
in my life i mean it it feels terrible but but, you know, I don't know.
And I'm like, you know, it feels horrible.
So I'm like, huh, well, let me keep doing this.
I don't know if I've ever even done a 20 or 25 rep set on any type of deadlift.
I've gone like 12 to 15.
Yeah, and that's no fun.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, I mean, I try.
I don't do it.
I haven't done that in a long time.
I think these days I don't go over eight or so on deadlifts. Also, I mean, it's unnecessary in the scheme of things for me and I'm not too concerned about getting hurt, but you start getting, when there is a decent amount of weight on the bar and you start getting up to those types of reps, it doesn't take much necessarily to tweak something or because if you're clearly going closer to absolute failure if you're doing that yeah anyways so where did this go so you can
everybody can picture where it's going it's not good so i kept doing it like an idiot and i'm like
wow my hrv still keeps going up the next day and i'm looking at my training i'm like man all my
other training is sucking i feel like shit i'm like what the hell's my other training is sucking. I feel like shit. I'm like, what the hell is going
on? And so then I decide one day to look and go, well, I wonder what happened to my average HRV
because I was only looking at the next day. I'm like, oh my God, my average has declined by like
12 points over like three weeks, right? So it's saying that overall I'm very sympathetic. And so
then I go back and I start looking at the data.
And what you would see is that it would bump up the next day, but 36 to 48 hours later,
it would tank even harder. So I'd go up 10 and I drop 15, right? Up nine, drop 13. For some reason,
and this doesn't always show up, there's only one study that's looked at it. Some things have longer than
a 24-hour delay, or in that case, a biphasic delay, meaning I overshot parasympathetic. I
went way up above my baseline, and then I went very sympathetic on the other side.
So the key with that is look at the average. Yeah, it's kind of interesting that kind of an extreme stimulus, which would obviously
be a sympathetic event that then produced kind of extreme reaction in the other direction.
And then when it kind of came back to the middle, it was just at a lower place than
it was previously.
Right.
So if you want to get really fancy, and this is pretty hypothetical
at this point, now I would tell people that any huge deviation, either up or down, right, even
too much parasympathetic or too much sympathetic, that means that your body is trying very hard to
recover from that stressor, right? Now, it may be going into the parasympathetic range as really trying to kind of go harder and
pull you back and what you'll notice on the days you train where your parasympathetic is very high
most people go oh my god this is a day that i'm gonna be like super recovered you know i'm gonna
test my one rm and it's gonna be amazing and they get to the gym and they're like, I feel like dog crap.
This feels horrible. HRV is crap. It doesn't make any sense. It's all worthless, right? Because if
you get too parasympathetic away from your normal, right? Think about what's going on.
You have very high vagal tone. You have very high autonomic nervous system that's pushing you
to try to limit performance and try to keep you more parasympathetic.
Yeah. I mean, as far as workouts go, you'd want to be, you want the opposite. Yeah.
Yeah. So if someone has like a powerlifting meet and we run their taper using HRV,
a lot of times, like the day before or the day of the meet, they're like, oh my God,
my HRV is kind of down. I'm like, perfect. Right? Because acutely, I want you to be more sympathetic on that day. It's only one day,
we take as many days we want off on the other side, we don't have to worry about recover.
You know, it's different if they're in a professional team, or they have to, you know,
play again and things like that. But for a one off event, I want you to be on the more sympathetic
side the day of that event, because your performance normally, especially in a speed and power type thing, is going to be a little bit better.
Now, I may not want that every single day you go train though, right?
Because you may bury yourself into a hole pretty fast.
So the context of what's going on is helpful.
And being a little bit too parasympathetic or sympathetic isn't really good or bad.
It's just something to be aware of.
And then that can then try to determine what you would do.
So if I have an advanced athlete and they're like super sympathetic, I may tell them like,
okay, switch days, right?
So you're going to do your aerobic stuff today.
You're going to do your weight training tomorrow.
Because I know aerobic work generally will have a bump in parasympathetic recovery. And if they did their weight training that day, yeah, they could probably do it. Is it
going to be horrible long term? Not horrible, but their performance probably isn't going to be as
good. We'll just flip the days. If they're very high parasympathetic, I will do something where I want some sympathetic output, but I want to very much limit how much it is. So I stole this from Coach Caldeets here at University of Minnesota. the top so you're doing an isometric pull about two to three inches from lockout so set that up
and then pull as hard as you can against those pins for only about five to seven seconds rest
maybe do it again like three times and yeah that's probably about it for your training right and if
you want to do a little bit of grip stuff or whatever cool so what am i doing i'm getting
something with temporarily a very high sympathetic output but there's no weight on the bar.
There's no eccentrics.
There's very little muscle damage, very little volume, very little work done. I just want to kind of poke the sympathetic system a little bit more and see if I can
get you back to baseline faster.
That's interesting.
I think of deloading, a proper deload, achieving probably something of that where you are giving
a little bit of extra time, obviously, recovery for the it's mostly obviously is joints
and tendons and ligaments and stuff but you also are doing like these days how i like to do it is
i'm using my normal working weights but i'm just cutting my volume in half and also just shaving a
couple reps off of whatever i was doing in my last training block. So they're short, boring workouts, but it is just
a little bit of a kick that probably to the nervous system a little bit. And then I guess
it's also maybe keeping technique sharp. Yeah, no, I a hundred percent agree with that. Like
if someone said, Hey, you know, especially if you're a little bit more on the performance side,
what is the quote unquote perfect taper and like slash your volume by like 60 to 75 don't change anything
else yeah yeah yeah you know because what are you doing you're keeping the quality of the work high
right if you're power lifter olympic lifter crossfit whatever you don't really want to see
and start all of a sudden doing rep work right because that may not be specific to your goal
and you may lose a little bit of motor learning because you're not doing that practice then either. But you're kind of beat up, your joints are kind of
hurting, you don't want to do a lot of volume that you may not be able to recover from. And
leading into that, I'll do even an overreaching, or like for a week, I actually want to see your
HRV start going down. I'll keep pushing volume until I see that thing start to tank and then we'll run
your taper after that, right? Because I have a pretty good idea, assuming all your other lifestyle
is very similar, that for your threshold, we're probably pretty darn close to it at this point.
Caveat with that, you just have to be careful how long you're going to run it and, you know,
what level of skill things that you're doing because your skill can, you know, start to start to drop off because of fatigue and that type of thing.
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On the training side of things, how much does training intensity, and that could be looked at, I don't just mean load,
but let's just say how hard you're working. So it could be volume, it could be load,
a combination of both. How much influence does that have on HRV? And just to also share,
I just recorded with Menno Henselman, I think it was yesterday or the day before, we were talking about the idea of, because there's an idea out there that you can accumulate central
nervous system fatigue from training and that it happens regardless of what type of training you do.
And that's one of the reasons that you deload. And he was going into the research showing that
that doesn't seem to be the case.
It looks like there is a bit of fatigue and then the body basically just recovers from
it quickly with a couple strange cases that aren't quite understood yet, where it was
like heavy eccentric bicep curling, where there was just heavy weights in untrained
individuals where they're just doing the eccentric on a biceps curl.
And that did actually seem to leave some residual fatigue that could be actually quantified. Whereas in trained people doing their
thing, it's fair to assume that there is no accumulation of CNS fatigue. And really the
reason for deloading is just the peripheral fatigue. I'm just curious how that jives with what you're
talking about and what you've seen in terms of HRV. And those things are not equivalent,
obviously. HRV going down does not mean that you have CNS fatigue, but I thought I would just
share that as well because it might be relevant. I was just curious as to your thoughts.
Yeah. In terms of CNS fatigue, to be 100% honest, I don't know. I've kind of gone back and forth, like, I don't know how many times on that from it's real, it's not real.
You know, now I think it's probably real.
To what degree?
I don't know.
All the anecdotal data I have is, you know, measurements using heart rate variability.
variability. So that's kind of the lens that I view it from because, you know, I can get daily readings on that from, you know, all my online clients, which I've been doing for almost eight
years now, seven years. So that's, to me, kind of where my framework is from.
Yeah, I was just curious if there was any sort of overlap there, just because it was
an interesting discussion.
Yeah, I think there probably is for sure.
What I have noticed is there is a huge amount of intra-athlete variability.
Like we've all seen this, right?
Like I had one guy who we worked with him.
We kind of changed some stuff to his training.
We did his taper different. And he was able to qualify for raw nationals for powerlifting.
And man, he was training pretty low rep stuff like five to six
days a week we kind of rotated exercises a fair amount but not a ton and he had a pretty high
stress you know life you know his sleep was a little bit less just because of everything he
had going on and his hrv was pretty darn good you know he only did very minimal aerobic training
his aerobic base appeared to be quite good i had another guy who I worked with who was a high-ranked natural
bodybuilder, came to me, was pretty beat up, had some shoulder issues we were working with,
and was doing kind of sort of a hypertrophy DUP type split, you know, a little bit more on the
power lifting, accumulate volume kind of area and so with both of them what
i did is just a simple experiment is once we had a pretty good hrv baseline is let's take you know
one or two days off and let's say monday so you had saturday sunday off monday go to the gym and
you're gonna do pretty low rep stuff you know really nothing above three reps maybe four reps
and we're gonna you know do a fair amount of volume on that with, with heavy loads, heavy loads. Most guys I use like
trap bar deadlifts and stuff that have a little bit less technique, bench press, things of that
nature, stuff that they're familiar with, that they know how to do. And these are usually pretty
experienced people by this point. So they don't have any problem doing that. Their technique's
fine, everything like that. And then we'll take one or two days off and we'll just see what is the change in your hrv
and then we'll come back and we'll take you know similar exercises or sometimes the very same ones
if i can get enough rest period between them and just pound a crap ton of volume right you know
eight ten rep range lots of volume lots of sets and we'll see what happens with your hrv so in the guy who qualified for raw
nationals like like we could just beat him up with like low rep stuff and his hrv would like
very rarely change the other guy who was the natural bodybuilder it took him almost 72 hours
to recover from a low rep day he was just torched and he's like i don't. And he's like, I don't feel sore. He's like, I don't feel mechanically
beat up at all. But he's like, I don't want to train and my HRV sucks. However, he could go into
the gym and do 30,000 pounds of volume as HRV would barely move. Wow. That's interesting.
Because generally it said that it's the high volume that beats you up. It's not the load as a rule of thumb that applies
to more or less everyone. I mean, nothing applies to everyone, but that's the practical advice that,
you know, anyone listening could assume like, oh yeah, for them, it's going to be high volume
is going to just generally stress your body more than high load if you were to ask me you know
four or five years ago i probably would have agreed with that and now i'm like i don't know
man i think it's much more individual than what we realize so for his program like monday wednesday
friday we'd pick a compound exercise we do you know around a five rep range somewhere in there
so a little bit more on the strength side. And then the rest, everything after that was accessory work, you know, 10 to 15 reps,
you know, Tuesday, Thursday was all, you know, kind of classic bodybuilder type, you know,
split work, a little bit higher rep range. And he did a lot better and he could do, you know,
30,000 pounds of volume, five to six days a week for four to six weeks in a row. And we'd do a
little bit of a taper then for a while and he was fine
now most people if i did anything close to that amount of volume i'd just bury him
yeah yeah that's a lot so i think by looking at hrv and then changing it can be useful and then
the other part if we back up and we go okay wait minute, what might be one of the determining factors in quote unquote
recovery, right? So how soon can you go back to the gym and do a similar workout again?
And I think it's aerobic base, your aerobic fitness level, the people I've seen with a higher
aerobic base, right? So things like obstacle course racers, CrossFit jumps to mind. I find that they can accommodate a lot more volume, a lot more stress kind of day in and day out.
And their HRV and recovery appears to be a lot better.
So now with new clients, I run them through a pretty extensive aerobic profile, primarily using the rower to see where their aerobic capacity is.
using the rower to see where their aerobic capacity is and if it's really low i mean like hey man we might do one or two strength training days a week you know how depending on their
psychology of how little i can get away and you're gonna hate life but if you can just give me like
six to eight weeks or longer of you know pure old school aerobic training i can almost guarantee
that you're going to be able to
do a lot more work once you come out of that. Otherwise, I think you're just going to be keep
bumping up against this threshold effect where we just can't get in any more high quality work
without you making massive changes to your lifestyle. That's interesting. That's something
that it makes sense when I think about it, but I hadn't come across that connection before.
I'm just not looking in the right places, but even just that point of, because I've written about just recently, actually, in a long article I was putting together that how cardio can obviously get in the way of muscle growth.
There's an interference effect there, but it also can enhance it.
And some of the stuff is like some points are kind of theoretical, like, okay, we know that increased
blood flow is good. And so it probably helps even though there might not be any good research to
point to and say, here we go. Here's these handful of studies are the weight of the evidence, but
we've all probably even experienced that. If you do a heavy leg workout and then you do a bit of
biking or something later that day, you tend to
be less sore or if you do it even the next couple of days, you tend to recover a bit quicker. But
this point of your aerobic fitness limiting the amount of volume you can get away with basically
is an interesting point and something that I'd never really thought of.
Yeah. And if we go, okay, what's going on after you get done with a heavy training session or
even from one set to the next, it's basically aerobic metabolism, right? You're switching
between anaerobic to aerobic, anaerobic to aerobic. You're going back and forth all the time.
And I know from my own training, like when I was getting into just some, you know,
bodybuilding type stuff, which I don't do a lot of, I kept track of all my rest periods and how much
work I was doing for a couple of years, spent a long time doing a lot more aerobic work.
So what I found was when I went back and did aerobic training, even the anaerobic, the
weightlifting stuff, I was able to slash my rest periods from one set to the next by a
lot.
Now, it didn't like happen right away. I think
there's a little bit of a transfer of effect there. So, I think there's something to that.
Yeah, I've seen research to that effect. I couldn't tell you the name of the study or did
it, but that seems familiar. I remember writing about that. I remember looking at some research
that indicated that's probably fair to
say that if you get more aerobically fit you are probably going to be able to recover faster in
between your sets and that can mean that you can also get more done in the time that you have
right yeah the main marker there is uh these heart rate recovery for kind of the vagal
reactivation that goes on. And you're correct
that the thing where people hear this and they go, Oh, so I'm just going to do like mixed mode
training all the time. And I'm going to lift weights and then do a 40 minute moderate session
on the treadmill right after. And I'm like, if you're untrained, that's fine. But I think as
you get trained, and there's a couple of studies that have looked at this, if you immediately sandwich a aerobic session, especially if it's right in that, you know,
moderate range, 50 to 60% of the O2 max, immediately after weight training, we do see
there's definitely an interference effect, right? Especially for the more speed and power type
stuff. We know that bodybuilders aren't
winning marathons, powerlifters aren't winning marathons, and marathon runners aren't winning
bodybuilding and powerlifting events, right? So we know what happens at some point. So I'm a big fan
of moving them as far apart from each other as possible. So like Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
Saturday, maybe like weight training, Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday, maybe just AM old school
aerobic training. And if they have time, I'll move their aerobic training to kind of be fasted in the
morning, you know, easy to moderate intensity, only breathe through your nose, I'll kind of
limit it a little bit. And then their lifting would be later in the afternoon. And I found
that that that tends to work pretty good
i mean you know in theory we shouldn't see as much of a interference effect there interference
effect is very widely debated and we just don't have a ton of good studies on it but if you look
at crossfit the level of which you can get kind of a hybrid athlete to get to now is much higher than I would have ever guessed that it was.
So I think we can have more concurrent abilities than what we thought was possible.
I think to get there, though, having a more polarized type training system is going to be more beneficial, to be my bias.
Yeah, Yeah. And that's
the general advice that I give people because most of the people following me are just wanting to
get really fit. And so they have to gain a bit of muscle. They have to gain a bit of strength.
They have to whittle away some fat. And for that, yeah, I say ideally split your lifting and your
cardio up on different days. If that's not possible,
can you put six hours or so between them? That would be good. And if that's not possible, can we put some time in between? But if someone, let's say they're cutting and they want to speed
up fat loss and the only option they have is to do 20 minutes of cardio or 30 minutes of cardio
after a lifting session, I'd say, okay, that's fine. And like you said, also, if they're new to, whatever,
the body's hyper responsive, they don't really have to worry about it. So yeah, that makes sense.
Now with HRV, are there any other supplements? So let me just say that. So generally speaking,
what we want to see is a high average, right? And it's going to change though. And it's going to go down if,
especially let's say with what we're doing, let's just take training alone. So if you're following
a program that, I mean, really, if you're following a well-designed program, you probably
should see some sort of negative impact as you get deeper into a training cycle, I would think,
or is that not necessarily the case? Do you have people who are able to recover so well that it doesn't really matter so much what they do in the gym and their deloading is more just,
again, straight up for joints and tendons and ligaments? Yeah, I think what I've seen is it
varies a lot. So, someone like myself, like I don't technically ever do any long tapers, partially because I travel so much that that
kind of becomes my own taper. And if my HRV and everything is going well, I just keep adding
longer time periods and I actually will start to add more frequency. So I started recently,
about four weeks ago, adding what I call just a 10-minute tissue session in the morning.
Grip strength is kind of more of my goals goals some goals with the rower for performance and i'm like okay can i get some stimulation of the soft tissue primarily
and maybe get a little bit faster remodeling and then i'll jump on the rower and do some aerobic
stuff then i'll do my normal training in the afternoon so depending on how i feel training
in the afternoon maybe strength stuff or i may you may flip it out for more of a cardio session if I'm feeling kind of beat up.
And then I'll just kind of intuitively look at my HRV and see how I feel.
And if I need more time off, I'll just insert a few more days.
If my hands and stuff feel, tendons feel kind of beat up, like that kind of soft tissue
just doesn't feel like it's there, then I'll do opposite work,
right? So instead of grip work, I'll do open hand work, plate presses, open palm work,
that type of stuff. With most clients, they usually like something being a little bit more
regulated. So I'll just push volume for four to seven weeks. I'll run a taper, as we mentioned,
cutting back volume by usually around 50%. But do you see in their HRV that it tends to
decline as they get closer to the taper? Yes. So in the real world, you have two clients.
You've got a client one whose lifestyle stress is way higher than their training stress,
right? So most of your time is going to be working on nutrition, lifestyle interventions,
making sure they show up to the gym, making sure they get high quality sessions. But you may or may not be able to
see much of a difference in HRV with training volume, because their lifestyle factors are their
main stressor. If you have people that are a little bit higher level athlete, so I got a guy now who
does a lot of CrossFit stuff, his lifestyle is pretty dialed in. He's, he's pretty good. He's doing his Wim Hof breathing and he's got a sauna and cold
water and all sorts of stuff. So with him, we'll push volume on him for up to his last cycle was
seven weeks. The week right before, since we've done this four times now, you can have a pretty
good idea of what's going to happen. The overreaching week is HRV was starting to tank. So I'm like, hey, that's okay. Time to pull the plug. Let's do a taper. Another guy,
very similar. He was borderline. I said, hey, we can do a little bit more overreaching this week.
I said, your HRV is kind of right on the edge. How do you feel? He's like, yeah, let's do it.
And he just tanked the middle part of the week. So he kind of pulled the plug early.
do it and he just tanked like the middle part of the week so he kind of pulled the plug early that's not exactly an answer to your question too how do you feel yeah let's do it
yeah but how do you feel exactly yeah and knowing his personality i kind of figured that was his
answer yeah of course but you know maybe i'm wrong i'm gonna let him run it and see what happens
but i told him like i'm gonna watch your hrv day. And if it goes south for two days in a row, we're going to pull the plug,
which if you're an athlete who really wants to push things, that's an incentive for you to be
like, yeah, I want to train harder, but oh shit, he's going to stop me if I go too far. So maybe
I'm going to do some more breathing. Maybe I'm going to go to bed earlier. Maybe I'm going to
pay attention to more recovery things because they want to train. So I think you can use it to your advantage too, knowing that
you're going to keep a close eye on it and you're not going to let them burn themselves too bad.
Yeah. Now, what about specific numbers? What about specific, I mean, it's going to be ranges,
obviously. So if somebody, if we start looking at it a bit more practically, and one last thing also, I haven't forgotten for anybody listening,
we haven't talked about nutrition yet. So I'm just curious as to that. But first,
what is considered, okay, things are good, keep going. What is, okay, you know, I think we're
getting to a point where we might have to, let's push a little bit further, but we're going to have
to taper. We're going to have to get a little bit more recovery going here. And then is it, where is it where you're like, okay, it's time to settle down for the next few days, do some aerobic work, get some extra sleep, whatever.
Yeah.
And that's the hard part because each system will have a little bit different way of how they interpret it based on the app itself.
Most of them will use some type of color coding.
And so I've used the iFleet app and
on that one if it shows red man rarely is the red ever really wrong right so if i'm using that app
and what is that range it's based on the change oh okay what we're looking at so when i start
with some initially so it's not like oh one to 50 is red. No. I got it. Interesting. Yeah. And that's also good and bad because what can happen is if you've got a slight decrease,
let's say you've got a small decrease every day, right?
To the app, some of them now will cross-check with a seven-day average.
So some of them will pick this up.
Yeah, yeah.
But if they're only looking at a slight change, it's like, oh, you're green.
Hey, you're green.
Hey, you're green again.
Oh, two weeks later, you're like, my average green hey you're green again oh two weeks later you're
like my average is like eight points lower than what it was or 10 points lower right you can kind
of watch out for that but most of the time like on that one red means that's a rest day amber or
kind of a orange color like a stoplight system if i'm just trying to kind of go with the same
program i'll either flip-flop days or I'll say,
man, you look a little beat up. Let's just cut your volume today by 50%. Instead of doing four
sets of everything, just do two sets. If it's green, probably continue on. The other factor
that you can use too is resting heart rate. Resting heart rate will affect HRV. Lower resting
heart rate, you will see a higher HRV overall, right? Because you have more
of that vagal tone, you're more on the parasympathetic side. So I've started using now
just resting heart rate as a very rough proxy for aerobic base, knowing that if they have a lower
resting heart rate, HRV is probably going to be a little bit higher, and they can probably handle
a little bit more volume. So initially I'm just
going to let them run building up volume and I'm not going to do anything to change HRV for that
whole first cycle. So I may get six weeks of data ideally without making any changes at all. At the
end of those six weeks we're going to go back and look to see what were the biggest effectors
because I need to know where is your normal baseline what are things
that change it for you and then I'm going to use that data and kind of play around with it
because otherwise if you don't have a good baseline you're just kind of really chasing
your tail all the time and during that time if the resting heart rate is very high and by high
I'm not talking like population standard more athlete standards so if they're like resting
heart rate seated in the first thing in the morning is in the 60s, most people would say that's not bad. But
for athletes, I'd be like, to me, that's on the high side. Ideally, I'd want even a strength and
power athlete, like in the 50s. You know, if they're endurance athlete, definitely in the 40s.
You know, some CrossFit athletes I've seen in the low 40s, they do pretty good.
If they're in the high 50ss i can almost guarantee their aerobic base
probably needs a little bit of work so based on that we may toss in a
little bit more aerobic stuff during their first program their first run
through just to kind of get them up to to speed a little
bit more but it's primarily going to be the change of hrv
and everybody wants like the magic number. And sadly, there isn't one. If I see a
change of more than like eight to 10, even on most of the different app scale, to me, that's
pretty significant. That means something's probably going on that day. And the little golden rule I
have with HRV is that it's super useful, but at the end of the day,
HRV is only telling you the status of your autonomic nervous system at that one point in time.
So it wouldn't make sense. Oh, if you have a low score, then assume that, oh, it's time for a
deload. Maybe not. Maybe you just didn't sleep well, or maybe you had a stressful day at work
yesterday or something. Yeah. If I see a seven day average, that's significantly lower. Then I'm starting
to think, okay, yeah, something's going on. And then I'm going to look at, you know, hey,
what's going on in their life? You know, are they stressed? They get in an argument with their
spouse or if their lifestyle is all good and we're pushing, you know, five, six sets of volume on
them. I'm like, yeah, it's probably the training.
So we're going to pull back on training. Even if their lifestyle stress is high,
I may change their training because training is the only thing that they may be able to control
in their life. Yeah, that makes sense. And another probably useful, just I can hear people thinking
who are listening, okay, so I'm not a strength athlete. I'm not an endurance
athlete. Again, I'm a person who wants to be fit, wants to be healthy, and I want to get there as
quickly as possible. And then I want to maintain it as enjoyably and as efficiently as possible.
And so I could see a practical use for, and I say I would probably fall in that group of people as
well. A practical use for this could be, for example, is this applies to me. It applies to most of the people listening. Our training, like you had
mentioned earlier, what you were doing with some clients where you have your heavy days,
you have your heavy compound days. So you might do a lot of heavy pressing Monday,
some heavy pressing Tuesday, some heavy squatting Thursday. And then Wednesday and Friday are some additional pressing,
but then also some arms stuff. And it's like for the additional pressing, it's some shoulder stuff
and a little bit more bench pressing. And so what probably could be useful is, okay, let's say it's
Thursday and I'm supposed to do some heavy squats and it's going to be a higher volume. It's going to be a tough workout and my HRV sucks. It might be a better idea then to, if I can maybe swap depending on what I did
the day before, but maybe I could swap my Friday workout for Thursday because it's just an easier
workout. Or even maybe like you were saying, maybe just do some cardio that day, just something
to give the body a little bump and recovery, and then squat on Friday and then go on Saturday and
do what I would normally do on Friday. So just again, looking at what are you supposed to be
doing in the gym today? And does it look like your body is up to it? And if not, if you can make that adjustment over time, I could see that just
producing better results. And if you can't, because you only have these little slivers of
time, then I would say me personally, I would just go do the workout and understand that maybe
it's not going to be the best workout. The weights are probably going to feel heavy, but I'll get the
work done. And then again, like you said, if I'm consistently seeing lower
scores, then maybe it's time to look at when did I last deload? What's going on? How's my sleep?
How's my nutrition? Yeah, I agree with that. And I, with clients and for teaching through
certs and stuff I do, you have two options. You have what's called a eustress or a distress model. So eustress, E-U-S-T-R-E-S-S, is stress you can more easily recover from.
So going to the gym and you do a session, and a few days later, if you had to repeat that session, you could do it again.
You're definitely working.
You're definitely working hard.
You're applying overload, all that good stuff, but you're not going to be not doing anything for a long period of time so a distress session would be a session takes you much longer to recover from
if you have a meet or you've got some type of performance event those usually almost always
end up being a distress event doing the crossfit games you're gonna get the crap beat out of you
for three days definitely a distress event but even for the person who is not highly competitive in that sense, I think that model is still useful, right? Because exactly what
you described, you have your two options. The eustress model is maybe I sub in some cardio,
maybe I flip days. I'm doing things to try to ensure that my performance stays pretty good
and I can kind of continue with my program as
close as I can. A distress method, which again is a higher risk, which may not be worth the risk for
someone who's not a more competitive athlete, is I'm going to have three shots of espresso and I'm
going to go squat anyway, right? Usually I find with athletes who are not very experienced, who
are not competitive they do
way too much distress training and not enough eustress you know every day starts becoming a
distress training and if you watch their progress over time it's going down but you ask me like how
hard is your training feel and they're like oh bro bro i'm training so hard man hashtag no days off
yeah hashtag no days off you know more caffeine
whatever you know but if you watch their performance they're trending down their hrv is on a fast trip
to hell i always think of i remember talking to cal deets once the university of minnesota
and he's writing all this stuff up on this whiteboard for like 45 minutes and i'm thinking
man how am i going to translate this into an article or anything? And at the end, I asked him, hey, Kyle, all this stuff. So, what you're telling
me is I need to do the highest quality work possible as often as possible. And he looks at
me and he goes, yes. I think that still applies for people who are not competitive, right? You want to go in,
you want to get, you know, hit your performance metrics because that's going to drive hypertrophy,
it's going to drive strength, you're going to burn more calories, just drive body comp.
But ideally, you want to leave, you know, feeling pretty good. And if you can go in and kind of do
that again, even better. So you can kind of make a few tweaks here and there, use HRV,
use other methods to kind of make sure that
you're doing that over the long term, I think it's super useful, which is why in formal research
studies, HRV prediction of performance is very mixed. You know, the one study they did were
HRV guided training versus not guided training. The HRV guided training and not training,
they got the same result. You know, at the end,
there was no difference in performance. And I think they measure hypertrophy too.
Did you like the methodology though, of the HRV guided?
It wasn't bad, but the HRV guided, I believe finished 17 days earlier, or maybe it was 12,
but it was a significant amount of time that they finished earlier. Right? So, if you look at the study,
you could be like, hey, using this HRV, we don't get a better result over the course of a study.
That's actually correct. However, in the real world, if I finish, let's say, 12 days early,
man, that's like, you know, 10 more sessions I could do in order to get better, right? So,
it's saving me time that I can spend training more possibly get a better result
and like i said acute hrv for strength and power even a little bit sympathetic i think is going to
enhance performance on that day now again that's a distressed model would you want to run that
every day i would say no like i want hrV to be almost flat for as long as possible,
right? Because now I can get in, I can get my work done. Yeah, I may even keep pushing up volume
until I see a decline to kind of know where that threshold is. HRV and acute performance is kind of
a mixed bag. And a lot of it depends on what factors are you looking at. And by virtue of
running the study, you have to control certain factors.
And that's just the nature of running the study and setting it up.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And as far as acute HIV goes, I think of what you were saying with your crazy deadlifting
experiment, where if you also saw a notable jump, you might want to take that into account
too.
Like, what did you just do?
Did you just do sets of 25 reps
of deadlifting yesterday? And then now you're supposed to go squat heavy today. It might be
the same type of process where it's like, yeah, maybe not. Maybe it's better to save that for
tomorrow and today do something that is more you stressing to the body.
Yeah. And you had mentioned soft tissue stuff too. my current little pet hypothesis is i think in
more advanced trainers i think soft tissue may be the rate limiter to progress which there's not a
lot of data on that but if we just look at simple turnover rates you know muscles around 90 days
you look at your right bicep in 90 days it's gonna a lot of it's gonna be replaced right and
you look at soft tissue closer to nine months, right? And then you look at soft tissue,
closer to nine months, right? Depends on what tissue you look at and overloading,
all that kind of stuff. If you look at injuries, you know, most people injure soft tissue,
like rarely do they injure muscle. It happens, it's just relatively rare. So, there's some work
from Keith Barr and Dr. Shah looking at collagen supplementation. They actually use gelatin. They
did have a follow-up study that used both 60 minutes before exercise and showing that markers
of tissue turnover in soft tissue actually went up. However, collagen or gelatin at other times
did not. So, for the past about a year and a half now, I've been having athletes take 15 grams is
what they use in the study. So 15 grams
of gelatin or collagen about 40 to 60 minutes before exercise and hoping maybe we can get some
more turnover into the soft tissue and, you know, maybe see faster results. That's interesting. I
haven't come across that study. I'd like to look at it. Yeah, I can send it to you. I mean, it's,
is it a randomized controlled trial with a biopsy?
No, because we're looking at soft tissue. Because I get people who are like,
oh, this study's crap.
Yeah, but it's also where you're acknowledging saying, hey, look,
not sure if this works, but this is extremely cheap and there's no downside to it.
Collagen protein is, I know it's not the same thing, but it's just, I've basically shit on that that. I mean, it's pretty much trashed here, protein.
And a lot of people think, though, that, oh, if they have the collagen protein, then I think it's probably mostly women and that it's going to make their hair and skin and nails prettier.
And it's going to be good for their joints.
And that's not true.
Yeah, I would say the data on that is pretty mixed, although some of the newer data shows that some of those things may be true. Yeah, I would say the data on that is pretty mixed, although some of the newer data shows that
some of those things may be true. I'd say the jury is still out a little bit for general health.
But the only studies that show collagen is beneficial for muscle recovery,
I don't trust the studies and they have some interesting sponsorship in the way it was set up
and it just doesn't make
sense with all the other data that we have. So, for muscle recovery, I 100% agree with that on
collagen. Yeah. I mean, you can just start with the amino acid profile and go, yeah,
that's not as good. I'm sorry. Yeah. It's missing essential amino acids. Yeah.
Cool. Well, this is a bit random and out of order, but I don't want to leave it unaddressed.
And that is nutrition.
How does nutrition affect HRV?
There's some interesting studies looking at fruit and vegetable intake will increase HRV,
possibly essential fatty acids, EPA, DHA.
Those are more kind of population based than a couple intervention studies. On an individual level, it definitely can affect it, but it's not as much of a one to one correlation as training. And most likely, it's a stressor, potentially, if you have something that quote unquote, may not agree with you per se, but that has other factors, right, in terms of, you know, sleep and impacting other things. We do know that HRV is probably related to levels of inflammation. We do know nutrition
can modify inflammation. You know, how much those dials can be tweaked and shown up in day-to-day
measurements, I think is pretty hard. So, what I like to do with clients is we have a pretty good
idea of HRV baseline. We've got a pretty good idea of how they respond to training, their sleep, their other stress factors are pretty good. The first thing I'll do is I will bump up essential fatty acids. So normally fish oil. I mean, I'll even go up to maybe two to four grams for a period of time of combined EPA, DHA.
Which really isn't that high for physically active people, especially not for... No, DHA even changed their recommendations.
Yeah, especially not for athletes, right, who want to reap some of the anti-inflammatory benefits.
No, it's not that crazy high. I mean, and that's based off of I do at-home blood testing on
athletes. They send it, hit their finger with the bleed on paper, send it in, and they'll run
an analysis of EPA, DHA,
red blood cell content, all that kind of stuff. So I find that most people need a higher amount
to hit a higher threshold. You can get into cardiovascular risk and other stuff there too.
And if everything else is stable, after I get that pretty good, which usually I do on a blood test,
I'll play around with micronutrition. And I'm like, hey, do you want to just,
let's do an experiment where we're going to bump up your micronutrition and I'm like, hey, do you want to just, let's do an experiment where
we're going to bump up your micronutrition a lot higher than what you've had. And most of the time
people will see an increase in their HRV over time. And what does that look like? Like, are
there specific foods that you like to tell them eat more of these things and here's why? Yeah.
So, I mean, I use chronometer to do like a little bit more of a seven-day micronutrient
analysis on it chronometer is just software that'll basically do it for you and it's not
very expensive i used to use like super fancy dietetics only programs it cost hundreds of
dollars and now an online program does basically the same thing for you
so i'll run that and then I'll do the old school,
just look at it.
I just pulled this up.
I've never seen this before.
Oh yeah, I don't have anything to disclose about it,
but they use verified sources for it
because other, my fitness pal,
places anybody could enter anything.
So I was spending more time trying to figure out
the thing that they entered.
Was it actually even close to accurate or not than anything else it was driving me insane but yeah
so i like that i'll do the back of the envelope where i just look at all their intakes and then
i look for colors like oh wow you are like not eating anything green at all you know or no reds
or violets or purples at all, right? So maybe eat more berries,
mixed berries, things of that nature. And that'll get you pretty close in terms of polyphenols and
stuff like that. You know, the old school, I don't know if I got this from Chad Waterbury or whoever,
they kind of eat from the rainbow. You know, if you're eating a wide variety of colors,
you know, for all the polyphenols and different compounds we know, you're probably going to be
pretty good.
Now, we don't know exactly which ones are more beneficial than others.
Probably depends on what's going on.
Another one that I realized up until a couple of years ago, I completely just left out was mushrooms.
So fungi, they're actually a whole separate subclass that have different phytonutrients and things in there, beta-glucans, all sorts of stuff.
So that's an easy one to look for that people are just generally missing altogether. And just by
doing that, I usually find HRV does go up a little bit in most people, not everyone. I usually find
their ability to handle volume goes up. And I find that a lot of times joint pain will kind of clear
up on its own, which is interesting. I guess that's not entirely surprising because of the inflammation interactions.
No, inflammation.
Yeah, that would be my guess too.
I mean, the biggest driver, I would say, of HRV long-term is usually aerobic base.
I've noticed a huge difference with that.
But nutrition definitely does play a role.
In terms of supplements,
I haven't found a lot that really move the needle, to be perfectly honest. I mean, I've used a whole bunch of different ones just to see and really not that much, you know, things that help
sleep and help other lifestyle factors, I think do help a little bit. I have found that pretty
high doses, like I mentioned, of medicinal mushrooms,
especially reishi and turkey tail, if I'm traveling, my HRV won't necessarily go up,
but it doesn't seem to drop as hard. My guess is that's probably an immune effect,
something along those lines. I mean, I've used pretty high doses of CBD.
I don't really notice a big difference in HRV. I have noticed it's a little bit more
stable perhaps, but in terms of direct effects, I did this the night before. Do I see a big
difference the next day? I don't really see anything that has a big positive effect.
Well, that's not entirely surprising considering the evidence on CBD is all over the place and there's not that much good research that is
unbiased and with just healthy people that you could extrapolate to you.
Yeah, and most of it is in pathologies and a lot of the better CBD research and cannabinoids,
things like that is from Israel and other ous countries because it's been a federal
one schedule one drug for so long in the u.s i mean cbd is not now obviously because it's not
psychoactive but on strengthened recovery there's one super old study that people kind of wheel out
all the time about growth hormone effects and cortisol and it was a very small study and i
have a copy of the original study and it's
not super impressive
sadly i wish it was but there's gonna be a lot more research coming that's for sure it's so hot
right now oh there's a lot more that's being done now i haven't gotten behind it just because of
the state of the evidence is i mean i wrote a long article and recorded a podcast on it that in some cases for some people, of course, it makes sense.
Seizure related things, of course, make sense.
And it might help with anxiety in some cases and some people.
But outside of that, it is not too impressive based on what I have read.
And also there's the problem of you don't know what you're getting
unless you really know what you're getting.
But unless you definitely know what you're getting,
you don't know what you're getting.
It might have no CBD in it.
It might have CBD in it.
It might also have THC in it,
which would, if you are an unscrupulous,
just cannabis person as the,
I love it.
It's like a euphemism. Instead of
calling it weed, it's now cannabis. Like I partake in cannabis. You mean you smoke pot,
but you go, all right, how can I get people to want to buy more of this stuff? I'll put a low
dose of THC and no one's going to catch me and there are no consequences. And then people are
going to feel that they're going to be like, Ooh, I feel good. And so there's quite a bit of that that is going on as well.
So that's why in general, I personally stay away from it.
I recommend people stay away from it.
And then there's dosing too, right?
If you're going to get anything out of it, you're going to have to spend with some of
these companies, you'd have to spend literally hundreds of dollars a month if you wanted
to just get a decent dose.
Yeah.
I mean, I've done a fair amount of work on it starting about three and
a half years ago. And real short, there is some okay data with anxiety with provoking people into
public speaking. But again, doses were 120 milligrams up to 300 megs. So pretty high.
Again, that's it. You could argue that's an acute intervention. So you don't maybe don't need to do
that all the time. Quality is a massive
issue. There's even older reported stuff of exactly what you said, high THC amounts that were
well above the limit right now. I do think though that there is pretty good data for
possibly reducing the risk of head trauma and TBI so traumatic brain injury i guess my number one use i would say of
cbd and mixed cannabinoids and a hemp oil would be if i have worked with anyone who's in any sports
or they may take impacts to the head mixed martial arts even soccer american football
i use a fairly high dose before i go kiteboarding just in case I get dropped out of the sky on my head. And from a low dose general neuronal health standpoint, I think you can make a pretty good
argument for it. But maybe there's a few other case pathologies, maybe sleep regulation,
depending on what you have going on. That's very, very variable. But it's hard because,
as you know, the endocannabinoid system does regulate things
like pain different levels of pleasure anxiety all these different you know kind of pleurotropic
effects across the body so there is a potential that it may modify you know some of those so there
is some physiologic background that makes sense but exactly what you said when you look at the research though yeah i would say it's limited in a lot of areas and is not as much of a panacea as what people
claim to be however there are some you know i think very useful and legitimate uses for it
either so even though it has all the hallmarks of snake oil and we'd be hesitant to kind of
toss it entirely out so which that's not a simple
story. Nobody wants to hear it. Yeah. Yeah. You know, that makes sense. I didn't come across that
anything on trauma and treating head trauma, but that's interesting. Yeah. I'll send you a whole
paper I need to release at some point. I've spent fricking two years on, on doing it and remind me,
I'll send it over to you. But the short version is in rat studies that got whacked on the head,
having CBD mixed cannabinoids
help prevent the blood brain barrier from opening up.
So if you take a big whack to the head,
like two big things happen,
you have glucose metabolism basically goes offline.
So you have a massive energy shortage
and potentially you can have your blood brain barrier
start to open up because of the damage.
And when that starts to open up, you've got all these things that flood into the brain,
causing neuroinflammation, which just exacerbates everything else.
So, CBD and mixed cannabinoids, and even THC to some degree, may help with both of those.
So, they can reduce some of the neuroinflammation going on,
which may help some of the energy metabolism stuff.
Exogenous ketones,
ketogenic diets could help with that. George Brooks's lab has done lactate infusions,
looking at that post-TBI. Blood-brain barrier integrity, again, this was done prophylactically
before the little mice got whacked on the head. That may be beneficial for that. And even in a
study looking at car accidents, so people who had a TBI from a car
accident, obviously, if that happens, most states, you have to run a toxicology screen.
They went back and retroactively looked for people who had positive THC on their talk screen versus
mortality outcomes in several hundred people with a TBI. If you had a positive talk screen for thc your risk of or how much how sooner
you died right your mortality risk actually was better so some super interesting data in that area
a lot of stuff we don't understand yet but i think it might be useful for that and hopefully we'll
have more data in the future again we're never going to
have perfect randomized controlled trials because no irb is going to prove okay you people get cbd
you people don't we're going to whack you all in the head and give you a tbi and see what happens
so maybe when we have clones even then it probably won't be allowed. China, they have these half human hybrids. Maybe we can use
like a half cow, half human. Yeah, there's all sorts of crazy research in other countries.
Who knows? Well, so last question for HRV is, so for somebody who wants to start tracking their
HRV, I know you've mentioned a couple things in terms of apps
and devices and so forth, but maybe just quickly let them know, all right, so get one of these
things to track your heart rate and then get this app, hook it up and off you go.
Yeah, I like right now, I mean, there's a fair amount of systems on the market that are pretty
good. Most of the time you're going to need a dedicated system to do it. Yes, it's probably
going to cost you a little bit of money
when i was presenting i was teaching a class at st thomas when i was an adjunct there and this is
like when hrv just started i had my old android like razor one phone and i put it up and i displayed
my hrv on the screen and all the students are like oh my god your phone it's so old i'm like
it's two years old at this point and i'm telling all about hey you can get hrv on your phone it's so old i'm like it's two years old at this point and i'm telling all about
hey you can get hrv on your phone now this stuff used to cost you like 10 12 grand in the lab
and the app's only eight dollars and they're like what eight dollars for an app that's crazy
i'm like no that's like cheap those are gonna be like thousands of dollars um so but it will cost
you some money.
Again, not that much.
It's usually a one-time thing.
You can use Bluetooth.
Heart rate strap is what I primarily use.
There are some dedicated finger sensors that will work also.
Is there any brand that you like, like any specific product?
So my bias, what I use for all my online clients is either the Aura Ring or the iFleet.
So I like the iFleet a little bit better if the client will be able to
take a single point measurement in the morning. Can you spell that? Yep. I-T-H-L-E-T-E. The letter
I. Letter I. Yep. That was a bad branding choice, that name choice. Yeah. But they have papers
showing that it has been verified. It's the same one I've used for quite a while. It does have all
the context in there. The interface is pretty nice. So if the athlete
will do a single point measurement in the morning, that's what I'll go to because laying down,
especially as you start getting into low heart rates, you can have something called a parasympathetic
saturation, which in English just means that you have such a high vagal tone because you're laying
down and you're a trained
athlete that all these other stressors just don't show up in your measurement, right? But if you
are seated or you stand, now the heart has to work a little bit harder because it's got to work
against gravity. But because you're in that same position every day, that doesn't really factor
into a variability analysis. So most people will do seated.
If your heart rate starts getting down in the morning in the low 40s,
you may have to do it standing.
And when you do that, you have a little bit of that sympathetic tone
that gets you out of that super high parasympathetic saturation.
And now other stressors will show up in the measurement.
So if someone says, hey, I've been doing this stupid HRV thing and my HRV
never changes. My first question is, what's your resting heart rate and how did you measure it?
You're like, oh, bro, my resting heart rate's 43 and I measure it laying down. Yeah, I would not
expect to see a big change. So do it seated first thing in the morning. I do like the aura ring.
Aura is a ring that goes on the finger. We'll measure sleep with about a 70% accuracy according to studies they published. The HRV on Aura is super accurate.
The reason they do it on the ring is because they can get access to the vessel there.
They can map out the entire waveform. They can tell you temperature. They can tell you
respirations even. They can pull that out of the waveform. It's very accurate. The downside is
two things. One, it's collected over the downside is two things one it's collected over
the whole night's sleep which is good to see what your kind of average hrv is but if your sleep is
changing a little bit now your collection period is a little bit different because it's collected
over that time period so that can it's just a changing variable some people if their resting
heart rate is super low their hrV may not detect enough change to accurately
reflect training and other acute stressors. But if you want something that's just kind of an overall
HRV to see where you're at, it's definitely useful. My bias still is if you want to get
pretty specific and start dialing in changes to your training and you're you know a
little bit more of a trained mammal i still like doing the the single point measurement in the
morning plus a lot of the training interventions and the studies we have so far which there's not
a ton but almost all of those use that single point measurement as a proxy for it and it's also
closer to when you're starting your day and that type of thing
too. So it's, it seems to be a little bit more reflective, but those would be the main two that
I personally use. You know, there's other systems from, you know, mega wave elite, HRV, HRV for
training. And there's a whole bunch of them now that can be useful too. Yeah. That makes sense.
Great. Well, um, I think we should wrap up this was this was great this was a fast
two hours at least it felt it was a super yeah it was very informative that was awesome so
where can people find you find your work are you i'm assuming that you probably have a wait list
as far as clients and such goes but how does that world work for you yeah so the best place is
probably just on the website which is just
mike t nelson.com i do have some spots open for training once in a while there's usually a little
application there usually if i announce any open spots for training it's through the newsletter
first so anyone who's on the newsletter gets kind of first crack at that if you go to the top of the
website there you can get a free offer and get on the newsletter. Newsletter's free.
Send out content usually about five times a week.
And I spend a lot of time writing for that.
So most of my content right now goes through the newsletter.
So there'll be a way to hop on there at the website, which is just MikeTNelson.com.
And it's probably the best way.
I'm on social media and Instagram once in a while, but probably not all that much some days.
Because you're too busy doing real work.
Yeah, I have a love-hate relationship with all of it, to be perfectly honest.
I'm the same way.
Between you and me, I'd probably never even post anything on there.
I've said that a number of times.
I only use it for work, actually.
I don't really have a personal social media account i just have my
externally facing work related stuff because i don't like social media my social media is just
all mixed you know up until probably three months ago my instagram was all just pictures of
dark coffee and death metal concerts and weights so the newsletter is more geared towards people who want information that's digestible.
And I find I just like writing for people who want to hear something instead of trying to
appease whoever happens to like my stuff on Facebook, which I could care a lot less about.
Yeah, no, I understand. I mean, what I do is I will repurpose educational stuff that I create. So I'll repurpose stuff that I've written, turn it into whatever the limit you get on captions, 2100 characters or something.
Yeah, I just started doing that too. of the work that you're doing. And yeah, you're not going to get as much growth or as much
engagement or likes from stuff like that, as opposed to, well, if you were a woman,
it would just be your butt and your boobs. I guess for guys, it's either, either it has to be abs
or it needs to be large amounts of weight and ridiculous antics, but you'll attract the right
people though, that each follower that
you do get is obviously going to be somebody who appreciates the education and appreciates
the information and so that's how i look at it at least yeah no i agree and you know part of the
newsletter is also it's like yeah you have to go find the website and go to the top and actually
send me a legit email address to get on. And that's done
on purpose because, you know, I don't, I only want people who are, you know, interested in it because
I want to give them good information. I want them to actually take action on it so they actually get
better. You know, I'm not trying to impress everyone else who's not going to do anything
with the information. That's, you know, I purposely require you to make a little bit of action on your
end to kind of weed out people who are a little more serious over those who are not.
I'm with you.
We do the same thing.
Well, Mike, this was a great discussion.
Thanks again.
And I look forward to doing another one.
You are a wealth of knowledge.
I like it.
Yeah.
Thank you very much for having me come on here and ramble about all sorts of stuff and
especially HRV.
So I would
encourage people to do some HRV, play around with it. It's a useful metric to see how your body
responds. Perfect. Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
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