I am not yet a Masters swimmer, but I hope to get involved in the next year or two. In the meantime, I work out on my own. About 15 months ago, at the age of 44, I had a heart attack. They put four stents in my heart. I have susequently been checked out via catheterization, and my coronary arteries are clear. I now take a variety of medications.
Once upon a time, I was an okay freestyle sprinter. My cardiologist tells me I should work out at "moderate intensity" which I find hard to do. But I warm up slowly and cool down slowly, too. In between I am doing pretty modest intervals (100s on 1:30, 200s on 3:05, 400s on 6:10) and am feeling encouraged because I am getting stronger. That said, sometimes I feel my limits and cut the workout a bit short. (I go around 3000 yards a workout approximately 4 times a week.)
Here is my question: is there anybody out there who knows enough about coronary heart disease and competitive swimming to give me any guidance? Can I keep pushing to go a little harder, or should I back off? I would really like to compete again. Thoughts? Many thanks!
Red60
Parents
Former Member
Question...
Let's assume that a person has a heart attack and undergoes coronary bypass surgery to correct the bloodflow problem. This person assumes an active role of maintaining their health through diet and exercise and winds up with ideal lipid numbers and blood pressure measurements. Is that person still at a higher risk of heart attack in the future than somebody who caught their problem before having a heart attack? Does it depend on the amount of cardiac muscle destroyed during the initial heart attack? Does the cardiac muscle not regenerate itself?
Question...
Let's assume that a person has a heart attack and undergoes coronary bypass surgery to correct the bloodflow problem. This person assumes an active role of maintaining their health through diet and exercise and winds up with ideal lipid numbers and blood pressure measurements. Is that person still at a higher risk of heart attack in the future than somebody who caught their problem before having a heart attack? Does it depend on the amount of cardiac muscle destroyed during the initial heart attack? Does the cardiac muscle not regenerate itself?