Anyone else get sick with HIIT?

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Okay so tmi for a minute.

I get sick after HIIT workouts. I do martial arts 6 hours a week and have adapted to it. Walking and running? Easy!
But when I whip out that yoga mat, flip on youtube and spend 30 mins on a hiit workout? Im out of comission. Im gassy, woozy and gross looking. I have to lay down for awhile and then after a good, long numero dos, I'm fine.

Anyone know why? I have IBS but i don't know if that's solely the cause of it...

Replies

  • KickassAmazon76
    KickassAmazon76 Posts: 4,562 Member
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    Are you getting enough calories to fuel the demands you are placing on your body? Are you getting enough protein?

    That'd be my first check.

    Second check would be hydration... Are you drinking enough fluids?

    Third check is sleep... Are you getting adequate sleep?

    Last check would be physical... Do you have underlying health conditions that could be a factor? (I. E. Cardiovascular)

    HIIT is high intensity - so it really stresses the body. If you are lacking in any of the above, it'll gas you out.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 32,170 Member
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    High intensity effort is fatiguing and stressful, inherently. HIIT - if we're talking true HIIT, max effort intervals - is currently both overrated, and overdone.

    Elite athletes treat high intensity as a condiment, including it in the workout menu for specific reasons at specific times. This idea that everyone ought to do lots of it, regularly, is IMO trendy nonsense.

    OK, rant out of the way.

    In practice, doing more HIIT than our fitness level is ready for - which is going to vary by circumances - is, as I said, a physical stressor. The implication is that it can be good plan to phase it in slowly, not to go pedal to the metal all at once. Physical stressors cause our bodies to give us feedback in various ways; the symptoms you mention could be some of those ways. Sure, if you have a predisposition to IBS (I kinda do, too), your body might be more inclined to talk back via digestive symptoms. Our individual vulnerabilities will break down with stress sooner than our individual strengths do: That only makes sense, right?

    There are lots of things called HIIT these days. The specific type might matter, in how you react. If the specific moves you're doing involve - for example - lots of compression and decompression and bouncing/jouncing of your midsection, that could lead to some digestive distress for anyone. (Timing of eating, and even what was eaten recently, can have implications for this. Some people can't eat much in the way of solid foods before workouts, for example, or high-fiber foods, or dairy - the specifics are potentially quite individual/idiosyncratic - experimenting might lead to insight.)

    If you don't usually do high-intensity exercise, then that alone can cause reactions for some. For example, IMU some people experience severe digestive distress, to the point of vomiting, as a consequence of limited lactate tolerance. (Lactate accumulates with exercise, and may not be cleared as fast as it accumulates with intense exercise. Our bodies body can react to it negatively. It's an effect that can change with training, i.e., a person can become more lactate tolerant. There are specific strategies to train it, if it's important for you.) Just blood flow demands reportedly can cause the digestive distress effect, reportedly, in people who are sensitive.

    HIIT is for sure optional. What are you trying to get out of it? Do you have other options to achieve those goals? Can you integrate it into your routine more slowly, and adapt to it (if it's really important to you, then the "add it gradually" option may help you; or you might consider other specific moves to achieve the result you seek, if the midsection-jostling, or dizziness, or something else move-specific seems like a contributor).
  • scott_90345
    scott_90345 Posts: 17 Member
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    HIIT workout helps in losing fats by keeping the insulin level lower. I think the symptoms you felt after doing that workout was the response of your body to the stress. I'd suggest to put your effort in balancing high intensity training with the low intensity training, to get the maximum benefit from that workout.
  • MikePfirrman
    MikePfirrman Posts: 3,307 Member
    edited January 2021
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    HIIT really shouldn't be done unless someone has a really strong cardio "base". And if someone doesn't know their HR max (and isn't in the shape to be able to do a HR max test), probably best to leave off HIIT.

    HIIT should raise your HR from 85% to 90% of max HR (or more). Recovery from that type of HR needs to occur pretty rapidly. The better shape you are, the more rapid the recovery. If someone does HIIT not understanding some of these things, it can be quite dangerous. One pretty well known indoor rower died just last year after a sprint workout (one in which he held the World Record for a while).

    I do HIIT twice a week, but I also do four to five days a week of pretty easy long endurance workouts. I understand what my max HR is and I know what my HR needs to look like for recovery. If I'm in the middle of a HIIT workout and don't see it recovering as fast as I think it should, I abort the workout.

    I have a true HIIT workout planned today. Not looking forward to it. At all. I'll likely feel pretty awful on the last few reps, as I should. Anyone that reaches true 90% max HR will feel bad. Light headed, almost dizzy, blurry vision. Your brain and lungs struggling for oxygen, not terribly unlike suffocation.

    My wife does a "HIIT workout" on YouTube. My wife hasn't seen 70% max HR in like 10 years. It's not a HIIT workout. Not even close to it. But she's 60 this year and I'm proud of what she does do. But I won't bust her bubble either.
  • Pras72
    Pras72 Posts: 10 Member
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    Check sugar level drops and also blood pressure drops.. esp if u feel this while doing positions like downward dog, burpees etc.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,526 Member
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    HIIT workout helps in losing fats by keeping the insulin level lower.
    What's your source for this? Doing any HIIT exercise DIRECTLY affects glycogen and not fat while being performed.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,526 Member
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    Also if one is doing HIIT CORRECTLY, it shouldn't be done more than 3 times a week because of how it stresses the nervous system.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png