Journal of Translational Medicine 2022 Evidence: Doesn't Work

ME/CFS Patients Show Delayed HRV Recovery After Exercise

Summary

People with ME/CFS take significantly longer for HRV to recover after exercise, with the parasympathetic nervous system failing to activate properly during recovery. This may explain post-exertional malaise.

Methods

Exercise challenge with continuous HRV monitoring

Key Findings

  • ME/CFS patients took ~8 minutes for HRV recovery vs controls
  • Sympathetic nervous system remained overactivated post-exercise
  • Parasympathetic system failed to engage during recovery
  • Demonstrates reduced functional capacity for exercise
  • May explain post-exertional malaise mechanism

Limitations

Small sample, short exercise challenge

What This Means for You

If you have ME/CFS, HRV monitoring can help identify your recovery capacity. Extended low HRV after activity suggests pacing is needed. Don't resume activity until HRV returns to your baseline.

Source

Read the original paper in Journal of Translational Medicine ↗

Added to HRV Zone: 2025-01-10

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