Whoop tracker hrv sleep recovery vs pain levels

Kuapao

Active Member
I have been tracking my HRV, sleep and activities with a whoop.com tracker and my symptoms with a separate pain app (Manage My Pain).

I am finding that my level of pain, discomfort, and malaise rises as my HRV increases, which seems counter-intuitive because whoop then shows my recovery percentage has been increasing and improving at that point (meaning my body is supposedly better able to take on strain). Basically, as my body seems to be recovering, my pain increases!

Is this also what you are observing in your HRV/activity/sleep tracking?

I will add that I only started using whoop on month 9 of my 12 months' of misery, so its baseline was developed on me only being half myself. I also had begun to feel less to little pain for the last 2 weeks, since imposing bed rest last month, and started to do a little more this past week. But have noticed the pain is creeping back, so have been resting more again...
 

Kuapao

Active Member
Okay, my hypothesis is that on my "good" day or high (Whoop) recovery day, I must be engaging in more work, likely exceeding my energy envelope, and therefore causing the increase in symptoms.

I guess I need to do better at pacing.

Fyi: have noticed some unusually low (athlete-level, which I am obviously not) heart rate values with whoop tracker when cycling. So, have opened support ticket with them.
 

Kuapao

Active Member
@linda.boyles, I agree, which is why I am tracking subjective feelings separately. Logging them in Manage My Pain and in "CFS Tracker" Memento DB. Can't make up my mind yet if I can replace one with the other.

Based on recommnations here and in the dedicated FB group, I have just bought a Polar H10 chest strap to wear while awake and will use it with Pulsometer RR to learn by alarms what activities cause my heart rate to step into the warning and danger zones.

At some point, I may switch from whoop to biostrap, if the sedentary and sleep readings are fairly close. I am told biostrap app allows input from a chest monitor.
 

GrammaLinda

Active Member
I have been tracking my HRV, sleep and activities with a whoop.com tracker and my symptoms with a separate pain app (Manage My Pain).

I am finding that my level of pain, discomfort, and malaise rises as my HRV increases, which seems counter-intuitive because whoop then shows my recovery percentage has been increasing and improving at that point (meaning my body is supposedly better able to take on strain). Basically, as my body seems to be recovering, my pain increases!

Is this also what you are observing in your HRV/activity/sleep tracking?

I will add that I only started using whoop on month 9 of my 12 months' of misery, so its baseline was developed on me only being half myself. I also had begun to feel less to little pain for the last 2 weeks, since imposing bed rest last month, and started to do a little more this past week. But have noticed the pain is creeping back, so have been resting more again...
Hello - could it be that with some recovery, you may feel up to doing a bit more - activity and speed - maybe without even realizing it and it stimulates the muscles and nerves causing pain. I know even a small % of feeling better causes me to push and I end up worse off than before. I believe the trackers are geared for people who are active and training. I use the Oura ring/apps and my Samsung watch/apps. They both are always after me to add training or activity on a day when my values have crept up. I say are you CRAZY! What they need are apps that pertain to our conditions. "Today you can actually sit up in bed" or "try walking to the bathroom without help today." My favorite would be "today you can drive your car and since it is a warm day go ahead and put the top down." I am sure the day will arrive when they address some diseases.
 

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