Maybe while I apparently get nervous at the doc you feel calm when there? Lol.
But seriously, who knows. It may well be that your cuff is off calibration and would also report high at the doc’s.
From the little I know about HRV--and I think this applies to a variety of conditions--the stress involved in constant monitoring and worrying is probably more of a threat than the condition itself.
A shallow dive into the literature on HRV suggests it could be diet-related. For example:
https://elitehrv.com/case-study-the-...te-variability
My husband has sinus bradycardia, a left branch bundle block and premature PJC's. His fingers will get very white and sometimes blue. That's all I know so far. But it isn't all the time. Thus I thought the watch might be good.
Diet is one component, but there are several others including sleep, alcohol/tobacco use, physical activity, stress, caffeine, posture, overall health, genetics, age, gender, medications, noise, and climate.
Related to diet, I read in one article that heavier meals high in saturated or trans fats and high glycemic carbohydrates have been found to reduce heart rate variability, in contrast with a Mediterranean diet and lighter meals high in omega-3 fatty acids, B-vitamins, and probiotics. I have also found that my HRV goes up a little if I remember to drink a lot of water.
My HRV has been chronically low since 2020 at least--that's when I first identified it. I've played around with many modifiable factors in an effort to influence it, yet, it stays steady year over year, and it's actually declining. For my age, it should be about 40-60ms and mine is about 16-17.
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
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I took my wrist one to the doctor with me and that’s how I learned it was 7 points higher. For a few years I just subtracted the points and then finally bought an arm one.
So, thinking about portability of podcasts, how good is the audio transmission on the Apple Watch? I’m a little hard of hearing. Could I hear it if I’m out and about listening to podcasts on my Apple Watch?
that would be useful for me. But then, having one more thing to keep charged wouldn’t be great. I wonder how many podcasts I could load on there, could I have eight hours of podcasts loaded?
The sound quality from the built-in speaker would disappoint you.
As a source to stream to Bluetooth headphones, it works fine. But then again, your phone does too.
It *is* convenient to have the controls on the watch for pause/whatnot. Most earbuds let you poke at them directly to do that, but that's a bother if you have large hands/arthritis/...
I keep a couple Audible books on mine for hiking, but really the phone would work just as well.
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