I've been hiking the east end of South Mountain Park for the past few years, and I've gotten to the point where the National, Mormon Loop, Javalina, and Beverly Canyon trails are... shall we say, "less challenging"? I still breathe hard, and have to slow down a bit as I come to the passes, but I can hike them just fine.
However, last month I gave a double-red donation to United Blood Services. Two weeks later, I went for a hike on the National, and got my kicked!
I realize everyone's different, but... Does a blood donation effect everyone this way?
Well athletes use blood for doping purposes to increase performance, so removing blood will almost certainly affect performance. How long does it take the body to replenish the supply of donated blood? I'm not sure. Two weeks seems to be a long time for it to still be an issue, but I'm no doctor.
It could be other factors that have changed recently too, including temperature and humidity, or a shift in your diet or hydration. Or any combination of the bloodwork and other factors.
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
I believe your body replaces all the blood over about a 3 month period, so over 2 weeks, it would only regenerate about 1/6th of what you donated. Not sure how much overall that is, but it could explain getting winded on the climbs. If its much worse than that you may want to see the doctor? AT the same time, I am thinking hiking South Mountains in late June would kick anyone's pumpkin due to the heat.
Hike Arizona it is full of sharp, pointy, ankle-twisting, HAZmaster crushing ROCKS!!
Hike Arizona it is full of sharp, pointy, shin-stabbing, skin-shredding plants!
Hike Arizona it is full of striking, biting, stabbing, venomous wildlife!
When you donate blood, you give up a pint of fluid that represents about 10 percent of your total blood volume. About one-third of that volume is red blood cells and the rest is mostly water. The water is replaced within the day as long as you get plenty of fluids, but the red blood cell mass replacement can take about two months.
Most people, however, will be reasonably recovered by two weeks and functionally recovered by three to four weeks...
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
Our family doctor, years ago (late 50"s/early 60's) told me that giving a pint doesn't do much, but that when he was in med school they would give two pints, and assured me that had quite an effect.
Shawn
The bear went over the mountain to see what he could see.
Just as a quick aside, my first wife was on the team that discovered the gene for that. Got to hear about the Celtic Curse 24/7 for a couple of years. A disease tough to diagnose but easy to cure is one thing she told me.