Your OwnOptimizer result indicates that you have had a very intensive training period for several days or
weeks. Your heart rate has continuously remained at a high level. This seriously indicates that you should
have a complete recovery period. The longer you have trained intensively, the longer the recovery period
required to recover. Perform the test again after at least two days of recovery.
Sympathetic Overtraining (8)
Your OwnOptimizer result indicates that you have had a very intensive training period for several days or
weeks, and your recovery has not been sufficient. This has resulted in a state of overtraining. To return to
a normal training state, rest for a carefully monitored recovery period. Follow your recovery by performing
the OwnOptimizer Test 2–3 times a week.
Parasympathetic Overtraining (9)
Your heart rate has stayed at a low level, which is generally interpreted as a sign of a good recovery.
However, other parameters indicate parasympathetic overtraining. You may have trained with high volumes
for a long time, and recovery may not have been sufficient. Check for other signs of overtraining, such as
decreased performance, increased fatigue, mood disturbances, sleeping problems, persistent muscle
soreness, and/or a feeling of being burnt out or stale. You may also have been subjected to other stresses.
In general, the development of parasympathetic overtraining requires a long history of heavy training
volumes. To recover from a state of parasympathetic overtraining, you have to recover body balance
completely. Recovering may take several weeks. You should not exercise, instead rest completely for most
of the recovery period. You can possibly have a few days with some light aerobic training in short sessions,
and only occasionally include short, high-intensity sessions.
You can also consider doing a sport other than your main sport. However, it should be one you are familiar
and comfortable with. Monitor your recovery by performing the OwnOptimizer Test 2–3 times a week. Once
you feel you have recovered your balance, and your result shows Normal State or Good recovery, preferably
more than once, you can then consider resuming training. Once you start training again, begin a new
testing period with new baseline measurements.
Before you radically change your training program, consider your OwnOptimizer results together with your
subjective feelings and any symptoms you may have. Repeat the OwnOptimizer test if you are unsure of
the standardized conditions. An individual test result can be affected by several external factors, such as
mental stress, latent illness, environmental changes (temperature, altitude), and others. You should
update the baseline calculations at least once a year, when you start a new training season.
OwnOptimizer Trend
Select Test > Optimizer > Trend
See how your OwnOptimizer value has been developing in the Trend menu. It includes 16 of your latest
OwnOptimizer values, and the dates when the results were recorded. When the trend file becomes full, the
latest result automatically replaces the oldest one.
The most recent test date, a graphical trend of your results, and the latest value are displayed. Press OK
to see the written description of the result. Scroll UP or DOWN to view other values.
Delete OwnOptimizer Value
Select Test > Optimizer > Trend
Select the value and press and hold LIGHT. Delete value? No/Yes is displayed. Confirm with OK.
Reset the Trend File
Select Test > Optimizer > Reset
You can reset the OwnOptimizer test period. All the test results will be deleted from the memory. When
taking the test after a 365-day test period, or for the first time in 30 days, Reset test period? is
displayed.
ENGLISH
52 Tests