Hello ladies. I got a BFP last Tuesday, and I'm guessing my due date will be around February 20th, but hopefully I'll get a dating ultrasound in a couple of weeks. I was on CD 37 when I got the positive test. DH and I have been together for 10 years, married for 4 and have a just over 2 year old daughter. Glad to be joining you all and I hope I get to stick around!
My question... my cycles got longer and irregular when I started training for a half marathon last August (I did the C25K in March '11). They used to be about 30-31 days, and from August forward, ranged from 34-53 days. I am only assuming the running is what changed my cycle.
I was worried that some hormone levels or something might be off, so I was excited when I got the BFP (cycle #5, month #7), but worried about how continuing to run would affect me early on in the pregnancy. I called the nurse at my OB's office and she said not to worry, just to slow my pace a bit and try and keep my heart rate in the 130-140 range.
I was comfortably holding an 8:30-9:15 per mile pace before I got pregnant, and racing at between a 7:45 to 8:10 pace. So I figured slowing to a 10:00 minute mile would be plenty sufficient. But my heart rate is still up in the 150+ range. Even at an 11:00 minute mile pace. Any thoughts? Are you worried about your HR? I don't feel like I'm working hard at all, and I think the heart rate thing is more of a cautionary old school suggestion, but I don't know.
Any input would be much appreciated. Of course I don't want to do anything I shouldn't be, but at the same time I don't want to slack off or put in less effort than I could be.
Thanks!
Re: intro & a question for runners
Based on what I have read, the HR guidelines are a little outdated. The general consensus that I have found is to slow it down and to not get too breathless...you should still be able to carry on a conversation while working out. I wear a HRM while running and have found that if I keep my HR between 150-155, I can still breath just fine but still feel like I am not wasting my time. I am nowhere near racking up the miles for HM training, but I do about 10-12 miles per week. Basically, I will run mostly flat or slight incline terrains and when I hit a big or long hill, I will just back it down to a fast walk to keep my breathing and HR in check.
Mostly, just listen to your body and respond appropriately.
Congrats!
Mostly, just listen to your body and respond appropriately.
Congrats!
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This is pretty much what I was thinking. I'll check with my doc again at my first appointment, but I don't think I'm going to worry quite as much about the heart rate. Thanks for the input ladies!
my blog :: the domestic wannabe
I have the same issue with my HR going above 140 without hardly doing anything. i asked my doctor about it during my last pregnancy and he thought keeping it below 160 would be fine, considering when I really pushed myself pre-pregnancy it would sometimes get up to 175.
This time around, I feel like 160 is pushing it a bit too much, (maybe because I'm 3 years older?), so I'm trying to keep it below 155.
Ha, for the record no where did I say I was running a half anytime soon! My last half was mid April, and since I've been averaging 12-16 miles a week. I did a stupidly slow 5 miles yesterday, but that is the longest I've ran since my BFP. I'd love to do a race (not at race pace obviously) while pregnant though!
my blog :: the domestic wannabe