O teu Garmin pode prever doenças dias antes de as sentires

A VFC cai frequentemente antes de os sintomas aparecerem. O teu corpo já está a combater algo — o teu relógio consegue ver. Assim se leem os sinais e o que fazer quando os detetares.
Day 74: Your Garmin Can Predict Illness Days Before You Feel It
You feel perfectly fine. Energy is normal, no sore throat, no symptoms. But your HRV has been quietly dropping for two days. Then you wake up the third day with a cold.
This isn't a coincidence. Your Garmin can see illness coming before you can feel it.
What HRV actually measures
HRV — Heart Rate Variability — is the variation in time between your heartbeats. A healthy, well-rested body shows high variation: the heart speeds up slightly when you inhale and slows when you exhale, controlled by the parasympathetic nervous system (your "rest and recover" system).
When your body is under stress — whether from a hard workout, poor sleep, psychological stress, or an incoming infection — the sympathetic nervous system (your "fight or flight" system) takes over. Heartbeat intervals become more regular and less variable. HRV goes down.
Garmin measures this automatically during sleep using its optical heart rate sensor, giving you a nightly HRV reading without you having to do anything.
The science behind illness and HRV
Research by Dr. Marco Altini and others has consistently shown that HRV drops measurably 1–3 days before symptoms appear when the immune system activates. The body is already mounting a defence — white blood cell production increases, inflammatory responses begin — and this physiological shift shows up in HRV before it shows up as a fever or a runny nose.
A 2021 study found that consumer-grade wearables could detect COVID-19 infection an average of 2 days before a positive test result, with HRV decline being one of the strongest signals. The same principle applies to common colds, flu, and other infections.
How to read it on your Garmin
Open Garmin Connect and check two things:
- HRV Status (on the Health Stats screen): Garmin shows "Balanced", "Low", "Unbalanced", or "Poor". Multiple consecutive "Low" or "Unbalanced" readings with no obvious training reason is the signal to pay attention to.
- Body Battery: If your Body Battery is consistently failing to recharge fully overnight despite good sleep, it's a sign your body is spending energy on something other than recovery.
Your personal baseline matters more than absolute numbers. A drop of 10–15ms from your typical nightly HRV for 2–3 consecutive nights — with no hard training to explain it — is meaningful.
What to do when you see the signs
The key is acting on the data before you feel sick:
- Skip or reduce hard workouts. Intense training when your immune system is already engaged makes things worse and extends recovery time.
- Prioritise sleep. Go to bed earlier. Your body does most of its immune work during deep sleep.
- Stay hydrated and eat well. Not rocket science, but it matters more when your defences are active.
- Watch for continued decline. One low HRV night can be a hard workout or a bad night's sleep. Two or three nights in a row with no training explanation warrants caution.
You can't always prevent getting sick. But catching the signal early and dialling back intensity can shorten the illness, reduce its severity, and stop you from training through something that should have had you resting. Your watch is telling you something — it's worth listening.
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