Get chills after working out?
photo_kyla
Posts: 322 Member
I'm just wondering if anyone else gets chills after working out. I've been doing a lot of cardio (walking) the last week, usually 1 1/2 - 2 hrs a day. I'm sweating for most of my workout and warm enough that I don't want a jacket even if it's cool and foggy out. Once I get home, I'm fine for about half and hour and then suddenly I'm FREEZING. I'll put on a fleece and bundle up in a blanket, but I still have trouble feeling warm. My mom (retired nurse) suggested it was a drop in blood sugar, but it happens even if I eat something. Does anyone else have this problem?
0
Replies
-
That happens to me too. I haven't figured it out yet either. I have noticed that it only happens if I've REALLY pushed it with my cardio, so I had assumed that it had something to do with blood sugar as well. I usually just take a hot bath and eat something and then I feel okay again.0
-
I get the same thing, after I work out and after I eat. I still haven't figured out why that happens.0
-
Yep i'm cold now and I just worked out. I always assumed it's from going from being hot and sweaty to cooling down again...horses get a chill after being ridden if they aren't rugged up (blanketed) so I assume we're the same!0
-
It happens to me too, even if I eat something. Sometimes, it's accompanied by extreme sleepiness (which happens when I get cold). Very bizarre. I would love an answer.0
-
Dang cellphones. Yeah, this does happen to me.0
-
It seems this happens to a lot of people. I did a google search for "chills after cardio exercise" and got quite a few results. It seems though that people are guessing what causes it. Low electrolytes, blood sugar, nobody seems to know. I know that I get cold after spending time on the elliptical if I leave on the shirt I exercised in. It is so soaked with sweat, it's as if someone turned the hose on me. Leaving the shirt on while my body begins the cool-down makes it feel like it has ice water on it. By getting it off as soon as possible, it does not feel like I'm in a cold shower. Obviously what is happening is that evaporation is lowering the temperature of the shirt so it feels cold against my skin. But if you have put on dry clothes after your walk, this would not explain your chills. My first thoughts are that it's just a normal thermal response to sweating. Beyond that it seems to be anyone's guess.0
-
I'm just wondering if anyone else gets chills after working out. I've been doing a lot of cardio (walking) the last week, usually 1 1/2 - 2 hrs a day. I'm sweating for most of my workout and warm enough that I don't want a jacket even if it's cool and foggy out. Once I get home, I'm fine for about half and hour and then suddenly I'm FREEZING. I'll put on a fleece and bundle up in a blanket, but I still have trouble feeling warm. My mom (retired nurse) suggested it was a drop in blood sugar, but it happens even if I eat something. Does anyone else have this problem?
It''s similar to cold sweats, you must wrap up afterwards!
For a few hours after working out, your immune system is low. Therefore any colds or infections you could easily fight off in the normal course of events, may be that little bit harder for your body to fight off after working out.
After working out, have your shower or bath and wrap up. Don't let yourself be vulnerable to any germs or infections out there when you are working so hard to keep yourself fit and healthy.
Oh yes, one more thing, be extremely careful about that "boiling hot" feeling, you may think you don't need to wrap up afterwards, but it is completely deceiving, so much so, that when people get hypothermia, they will feel boiling hot and begin to undress, hence why some victims are found with next to no clothes on. This is because heat is being pushed from the inside to the outside, trying to warm you up, in effect there can be disastrous results.
Out of interest, why not have a soak in a warm bath if you feel chilled, this will warm you through.0 -
i get this too, but i figured it was my body adapting to a rapid cooldown.0
-
Happens to me as well, I always make sure to have an extra layer or jacket to throw on immediately after a workout or run (yes, even at races!) and have something small to eat/drink within 15-30 minutes.0
-
Me too. I figured it was because I was sopping wet and not generating my own heat any longer. I have low blood sugar and the ability to test it, it is not related to sugar.0
-
It is normal - many get it - particularly if you have not been exercising for years and in top peak form - I just got them now for 10 seconds and now gone - one - you must be low on energy food prior to working out and you have not hit your juice or food after the work out 60 minute window - two - during exercise, your body temprature is elevated and sweat is produced to cool you down then you are done and I always take a shower after (those who dont surprise me odor people) again inducing a new temprature for the body to respond to - as time pass your body is hitting its normal temp and a shake happens - dont worry too much about it, but insure you take your 5 meals per day if you are truly active and long runs or walk are not necessary if you dont run marathons - for weight loss short high intensity intervals followed by 30 minute medium difficulty cardio will do the trick - do weight training for endurance, muscle building take a multi vitamine for sport female/male get your amino acids and breath deeply through out the day and if you want to lose weight avoid high sugar intake that give the body spikes and valleys and train it to extract sugar from natual souces such as vegies - see you at the top = P.S I am not a doctor so always consult your doctor Ciao1
-
Well i get the same thing i know i for a fact its not my sugar. the strange thing is that i feel it more when im wearing like underarmour heat gear...might sound crazy but i think its to keep you from over heating and i also relate it to not drinking enough water through out the day especially if you are doing extreme cardio....if anyone is wondering Im also a nurse so its the most reasonable explanation to me, lol.0
-
This happens to me also.....glad to see that I'm not alone0
-
I get this too. But I was wondering what "path2a6pack" means by having a 60 minute window to eat after working out.
L0 -
I get em only on cold days. Its simply just body temp. dropping after a work out. Plus the moisture on your skin = cold skin on cool/cold days from sweating. I either turn up the heat or put on more cloths.0
-
Yep - I get chills and sleepiness. I just put a sweater on and feel fine. I usually get REALLY hungry about 1-2 hours after strenuous exercise, so I just eat when that happens. I suppose I just give my body what it needs.0
-
I get this too. But I was wondering what "path2a6pack" means by having a 60 minute window to eat after working out.
L
He might just be using his own preference by saying having a 60 minute window to eat after working out. Kind of like saying after lifting weights he eats soon after (like a 60 min window) to try and quickly restore muscle glycogen. You should all know the window is much larger than just 60 min and I hope he knows this as well.0 -
I get this too. But I was wondering what "path2a6pack" means by having a 60 minute window to eat after working out.
L
I've had several dieticians mention this to me. I have no training, so I'm only repeating what I've heard and forgive me any misstatements, but I can tell you that it prevents the chills for me, and that's good enough in my book.
Anyway, the idea is that exercise (particularly intense exercise = sweating) burns glycogen stores (also known as "blood sugar"). That same blood sugar is what sustains metabolism. Your body is cold because it's basically depleted of energy and burning fat and muscle for energy takes a little while and works best with a small kick-start. So there's a brief period after intense exercise (I've heard the optimal window being as short as 20 minutes, with the benefit dwindling in about 60-90 minutes) where you really want to get a small carbohydrate-and-protein snack in you. By "small", my understanding is something proportional to the exercise - 100-200 calories should usually suffice, though. Say a small banana and a handful of nuts, something like that.
I went for a 4-hour bike ride in the cold (45 degree) rain with no food and one bottle of water. About an hour and a half after I got home, I got severe chills - to the point where nothing was touching it. I thought it was simply that I was dehydrated and had allowed my core temp to drop a bit, but I was perfectly fine when I got home and felt great for an hour and a half, and had enjoyed a nice hot shower to warm up an hour before. I was in misery for another hour until dinnertime.
About 10 minutes after I took the first bite of dinner, I warmed up almost immediately.
Now I make sure I have a small snack shortly after working out, and a small nibble of something every hour of a heavy/long workout, and I feel the chills no more.
Your mileage may vary, but it's worked well for me and is certainly worth a try, I'd think.0 -
Now that I think about it, I've begun to notice that I don't have chills anymore because I've been taking hot showers at the gym after my strenuous workouts.
On a side note: I loooooooove those hot showers. For years now we've only had warm water in our apartment because of our tiny and ill-insulated water heater. Two months ago I started taking showers at the gym. Heaven.0 -
Yep, happens to me quite a bit after a long run. I take a hot shower, dress warmly, and still feel the need to snuggle under a blanket to get warmed up.0
-
Glad to know im not the only one freezing my butt off after working my butt off! lol
funny bodies we have?!!1 -
Simple answer is you need more water and carbs. As people try to lose weight they cut carbs out too much. when you workout you are depleting your body of glycogen in the muscles. when you do this you lose water as well. you need these to maintain your metabolism to regulate temperature.
most people are not hydrated because they have cut carbs too much. to be hydrated you must have carbs as one gram of glycogen(what carbs are broken down to so they go into the muscle) attaches to two grams of water in order to be stored in the muscle. this part of the "pump". just drinking water will not hydrate you.
the solution to the problem. have one cheat meal with lots of carbs on an off day an drink a cycling bottle of water during your workout and one right after the workout.
how do i know this. i have been a fitness pro since 1985 and have used this method for my clients with this problem. This is a very simple answer and may require further discussion, but try this.
the best way to lose fat is to exercise more and eat more.
Brian
Green Mountain Fitness
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Green-Mountain-Fitness/2595163041698001 -
We posed your question to Dr. Ollie Jay, founder of the Thermal Ergonomics Laboratory at the University of Ottawa, who gave us a quick lesson on sweat and why your gender may have something to do with your shivers.
“When you go for a run, your metabolic rate goes up quickly because you need to deliver oxygen to your tissues to fuel muscle contractions,” Jay says. “The transfer of energy in the cellular process needed to create these muscle contractions is very inefficient, so a lot of this energy is liberated as heat—80 to 95 percent of it.”
That heat needs to dissipate to the environment in order to keep your core temperature from rising too high, and your body sheds the heat by increasing blood flow to the skin and sweating. “But we don’t start dissipating enough heat to balance the elevated metabolic heat production until about 30 or 45 minutes of exercise,” Jay says. So your body temperature will rise for about half an hour until it plateaus when you’re losing enough heat through your skin to keep your body from baking.
*When you finish exercising, your metabolic heat production immediately drops. But you’ll keep sweating for a while and continue to lose heat to the environment through the evaporation of that sweat. “How this affects your core temperature depends on your body’s shape and surface area to mass ratio,” Jay says. Women often have a high surface area to mass ratio, so they tend to lose more heat more quickly after a workout than men do, making them cold. (Taller, thinner men, Jay points out, also tend to experience the post-workout freezies more often than bigger guys.)
THE SOLUTION: Obvious, but it bears repeating: Change out of damp or wet workout clothes and get dry as quickly as possible.2 -
If you're shivering, you get to count it as a post workout workout.
I get done, get super hot so I remove layers and two minutes later, I'm super cold. The warm shower takes care of it for me.
A medical reason? I have no idea.0 -
Since this topic is still going...
I have begun to experience this sensation just this week. I'm on week 5 of a 6 week program. I take in the same pre/post workout fuel every day, so the amount of sugar I take in hasn't changed. The biggest difference in what I'm reading on here and what happens to me is that for me, this happens while I'm lifting heavy. During my set I'll feel cold/chilled in the areas that are being worked (ex: torso and arms), but it dissipates a few seconds after I'm done with that set. Yes, I'm sweating, but that's constant. I've also ruled out a fan or AC vent. It doesn't matter where in the gym I"m working. And it just started this week. I've never experienced it before and it doesn't happen any other time, not even after the workout. It's just...weird.1 -
So, my 2 cents is this....I have this occasionally as well....it is not low sugar for me, and it happens even after I take a shower and warm up. I think, for me...it is the adrenaline "low" kicking in. It ONLY happens to me when I have "kicked butt" and had one of those work outs that almost make you cry because you pushed further than you thought you could. Unfortunately, I have not had to worry about the work out shakes for a while now…I am getting back in to it slowly, logging food is my main goal right now. I lost 10 pounds last week (I know, some of that was water) and have kept off 9 (Memorial Day weekend happened). Good luck in the search for the correct answer…if there is one…I will continue with the theory it is my reward for kicking butt. LOL0
-
I have this problem too and found the following information from a doctor on a runner's website... I am no runner, but I am 71, overweight and out-of-shape, plus I have COPD caused by chronic bronchitis, not smoking... but I'm determined to get as healthy as possible... so my 2 mile walks are very hard on me and I FEEL like I ran a marathon after! ha!
https://www.runnersworld.com/advanced/a20812452/ask-the-coaches-goose-bumps-and-chills-in-warm-weather-marathons/0 -
Yes but only if the sweat dries on my skin and I don’t shower. I attribute it to that lingering moisture plus the air conditioning0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 421 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions