I am interested to know what a good resting heart rate (RHR) is for a Type 1 Diabetic. I’ve been Type 1 for 39 years and have a RHR of 64. Is this good, bad or in between?
I agree that type 1 diabetes should not affect resting heart rate.
Not sure about only super-fit athletic types being much lower than 60. First thing in the morning, before I get up, my resting heart rate is around 47 and I am far from a super-fit athlete. But no doctors seem concerned by this ...although when I came round after a general anaesthetic with a heart rate of 49, the nurse was surprised.
I agree that type 1 diabetes should not affect resting heart rate.
Not sure about only super-fit athletic types being much lower than 60. First thing in the morning, before I get up, my resting heart rate is around 47 and I am far from a super-fit athlete. But no doctors seem concerned by this ...although when I came round after a general anaesthetic with a heart rate of 49, the nurse was surprised.
I agree that type 1 diabetes should not affect resting heart rate.
Not sure about only super-fit athletic types being much lower than 60. First thing in the morning, before I get up, my resting heart rate is around 47 and I am far from a super-fit athlete. But no doctors seem concerned by this ...although when I came round after a general anaesthetic with a heart rate of 49, the nurse was surprised.
The Spainish cyclist Miguel Indurain apparently has or had an rhr of 34. That is genetic! You can lower it by training. I take people's BP and heart rate daily and it is rare to see one above 80 before exercise.
Resting heart rate on my fit bit varies between 57 and 73. It alters after the weekend,when I have had my weekend G&Ts and red wine. During the week if I stay on track with my sugar levels it also drops. If I’m going through a raised period, (I know I know, not good, but tends to happen every couple of weeks even when I’m not eating or doing anything differently) the resting heart rate rockets, it is very interesting.
My resting heart rate is always between 42 and 55. I wouldn't say I was super fit but I guess if I'm honest I'm probably fitter than a lot my age let alone being T1. I've been training in some format or another since my teens, and I think I take my fitness for granted on account it's something that is part of my life.
It annoys my wife when we check our BP. Other than that, the only time anyone has passed comment was a few years back when a consultant looked at the BP readings that had just been taken and asked " do you feel alright? ". It turned out I'd posted a sub 40 heart rate. We then had a chat about exercise and what types we both participated in.
My resting heart rate is generally around 50, but 'normal' is between 60 and 100. A measure of fitness is how long it takes for your heart rate to come back to normal (for you) after exercise - the quicker it is, the fitter you are.
Edited to add: readings taken at home using a Lloyds pharmacy BP monitor.