Training for a New “High”

Exercise and Fitness

Lots of athletes and exercisers claim they get a certain “high” out of hard work outs or pushing their bodies to new heights or “personal bests.” However, nothing compares to the type of stamina and endurance you build in your body through altitude training.

What is altitude training? It’s the type of training that many Olympians experience – training at heights well above sea level.

The basic theory is this – if you can learn to train and compete at a level where there is less oxygen available to your blood and muscles, then, when you return to “sea level,” you should be more of a first-class competitor in your sport, whether it’s running, swimming, cycling or another endurance sport. In fact, many of the best athletes in the world live at high altitudes (5000 – 7,000 feet or 1500 – 2100 meters) above sea level and travel to sea level for competitions where their endurance is greater because of their high altitude living and training.

Dr. John Hellemans, a well-known sports medicine practitioner, coach and altitude consultant in New Zealand, has a keen interest in altitude training and its overall effect on health and athletic performance. He states, “Scientists estimate performance benefits from altitude training to be between one and three percent, which is significant for an elite athlete. It is also accompanied by an amazing feeling of fitness and general wellbeing.”

Dr. Hellemans offers this advice to those who are just beginning attitude training:

“Recovery is everything at altitude. Generally your recovery is a bit slower so nutritional measures (including hydration) and rest become even more important to enhance that process. Many athletes lose their appetite at altitude initially and again this needs to be monitored carefully. Dehydration is also not uncommon and frequent weighing should be part of the monitoring process.”

As with any type of sport or training program, your body adjusts to changing conditions better when your nervous system is functioning at peak levels. The best way to accomplish this is through adherence to your chiropractic adjustment schedule to keep you in the tip-top shape you need to be in to compete in anything from the Olympic Games to the game we call “life.”

Dr Bianco Asks some important questions of interest to Louisville residents - Chiropractor Louisville Dr Bianco Asks...

What controls every cell, tissue and organ of your body?
DNA? Wrong. Immune system? Wrong? Hormones? Wrong. It's your nervous system, consisting of your brain, spinal cord and all the nerves of your body. When a chiropractor sees a Louisville patient with say, stomach problems, we want to know why the brain is unable to properly control and regulate the stomach. Which prompts us to examine the nervous system—the focus of chiropractic care.
What's the difference between a "good" drug and a "bad" drug?
As a chiropractor, I see the use of many drugs (legal or illegal) as merely symptom treating. Worse, virtually every drug produces unwanted effects. The effects of chiropractic are largely positive effects. If you're a Louisville parent, consider carefully before giving your child a cough medication, cold remedy or pain reliever so this sort of question doesn't arise in the first place.