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Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS). |
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I was wondering...does anyone have a good strategy for upping your heart rate through exercise? Do you use a heart rate monitor? I imagine that starting slow and proceeding in small increments makes sense. I'm not there yet, but the walking has been going well (have gone for 2 walks / day each of the last few days). Eventually I would like to try exerting myself a bit more, whether through faster walking, swimming, stationary cycling, etc.
The irony is that for non-PCS sufferers, aerobic exercise can be so beneficial for the brain (for a good book on the topic, see Spark by John Ratey). Whereas people with PCS, who could use these brain benefits more than most, often experience symptoms from exercise. |
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Junior Member
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greenfrog,
Hi! I've been using heart rate monitors when on my bike trainer in the house. I've been trying to keep the HR below about 140. I found that high heart rate was giving me severe headaches, as does abdominal workout, so I started with 120 bpm and slowly increased it every few days till I found my current limit, or threshold, then kept all workouts below that limit. I can currently cycle at about 140~145 bpm. The heart rate monitor was a better tool to rely on than gut feeling or RPE. Rate of perceived exertion or RPE is what some endurance athletes can use to gauge their effort, but for me, I prefer using the HR monitor, less change for errors. I tried to go above my limit a week ago and had a feisty headache. ggrrrr. Good luck Mike |
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