Billegitimate
New member
I'm curious about hematocrit levels. I was watching a Lance Armstrong documentary, and one of the things they were discussing was how they suspected doping because his hematocrit levels increased during portions of the race while they expected them to decrease as a result of the stress on his body.
So, it's the last part that got me curious. Apparently, the doping expert being interviewed said that hematocrit levels tend to drop due the the "intensity" of exercise, so an increase had to be caused by something else. I put intensity in quotes because in my book if you're doing it for hours, it's not that intense. 100m sled sprints are intense. 1 mile sled pushes are taxing and exhausting but not intense. So the bike racing wouldn't fit my definition of intensity, but the question still remains: Would exercising hard enough to really stress the body lower our hematocrit levels that may otherwise be elevated from TRT?
I wonder if hematocrit levels follow a J curve where moderate exercise increases them as an adaptive response, but very hard or long exercise decreased them in a fashion similar to overtraining.
So, anyone doing intense stuff like CrossFit, hard sprint work, hard anaerobic work, etc. who has noticed that their hematocrit levels stay in check when doing that level of exercise but climb otherwise, requiring blood donation or reduction of TRT dose?
So, it's the last part that got me curious. Apparently, the doping expert being interviewed said that hematocrit levels tend to drop due the the "intensity" of exercise, so an increase had to be caused by something else. I put intensity in quotes because in my book if you're doing it for hours, it's not that intense. 100m sled sprints are intense. 1 mile sled pushes are taxing and exhausting but not intense. So the bike racing wouldn't fit my definition of intensity, but the question still remains: Would exercising hard enough to really stress the body lower our hematocrit levels that may otherwise be elevated from TRT?
I wonder if hematocrit levels follow a J curve where moderate exercise increases them as an adaptive response, but very hard or long exercise decreased them in a fashion similar to overtraining.
So, anyone doing intense stuff like CrossFit, hard sprint work, hard anaerobic work, etc. who has noticed that their hematocrit levels stay in check when doing that level of exercise but climb otherwise, requiring blood donation or reduction of TRT dose?