All symptoms

By symptom

Athletic recovery problems.

You train hard. You don't bounce back. Something physiological is in the way.

What’s actually going on

How I think about this.

Athletes and serious recreational lifters are often the most undertreated patients in conventional medicine because their baseline is so far above the patient population the reference ranges were built around. A resting heart rate of 50 looks “normal” on a clinic chart. For an endurance athlete, it might be high. A testosterone of 450 ng/dL is “fine” on the lab. For a 35-year-old man training six days a week, it is often the limiting factor on every other adaptation he is trying to build.

The presentations I see most in this population are persistent soreness that doesn't resolve, training plateaus that don't respond to programming changes, sleep that stops working despite the volume and intensity that used to demand it, mood and motivation drift, libido changes, slow injury healing, and the resting heart rate creep that is often the first signal of overtraining.

The drivers cluster around chronic energy availability deficit (eating below what training demands without realizing it), under-recovered sleep architecture, hormonal suppression from training volume, gut inflammation from heavy training, iron and ferritin gaps (women especially), and the inflammation patterns that accumulate when the body is asked to perform without adequate recovery inputs.

The physician’s lens

How I read this in practice.

I read athletic recovery across the hormonal, metabolic, and inflammation axes together. Total and free testosterone with SHBG. Cortisol across the day. The full thyroid panel. Iron studies with ferritin. The metabolomic panel for the energy production story and the upstream nutrient picture. VO2 max if performance is part of the question. DEXA if body composition shifts are part of the presentation. I read this against training load and recovery markers, not against a sedentary reference range.

What I’d test first

The data that explains it.

Athletic recovery work needs the full hormonal and metabolic read, with explicit attention to the cortisol-testosterone ratio and the inflammation markers. The VO2 max and DEXA add objective fitness and composition data that the patient often can't read from their own training app.

While you wait

Moves worth making before testing.

These are the levers I’d pull while we set up the workup. Most of them produce real signal inside two weeks.

  1. Add a deload week every fourth week. Most overtraining presentations come from never letting the body recover at scale.
  2. Eat more than you think you need. Under-fueled training is the most common cause of plateau in serious athletes.
  3. Anchor your sleep schedule. Recovery happens overnight; the schedule matters more than the duration.
  4. Track resting heart rate weekly. A creep up over weeks is often the first signal that load is exceeding recovery.

If two weeks of the basics doesn’t move the needle, that is exactly the kind of presentation a Precision Call exists for. Your biology is telling you something the lifestyle layer cannot fix on its own.

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