What It Does
The cardiovascular system — heart, blood and blood vessels — delivers oxygen and nutrients to working muscles and removes waste products. At rest the heart beats around sixty to seventy times per minute. During maximal exercise that figure can exceed two hundred, and blood output can rise from five litres per minute to over twenty. The diagram below shows the four chambers of the heart and how blood circulates through them. Use the buttons to see how the heart responds at different intensities.
What Happens the Moment You Start Training
The sympathetic nervous system signals the heart to beat faster and harder within seconds of exercise beginning. Blood vessels supplying working muscles dilate, vessels to non-essential organs constrict. The body redirects blood precisely where it is needed — a logistical operation of extraordinary complexity happening entirely automatically.
Heart Rate Training Zones
Heart rate zones describe what the body is doing at each intensity level. Click each zone below to see what is happening physiologically and what training effect it produces. Understanding this changes how you programme your sessions.
How the Heart Adapts to Training
Consistent cardiovascular training produces cardiac hypertrophy — the heart muscle strengthens and chambers enlarge, allowing more blood per beat (stroke volume). The result is a lower resting heart rate. Elite endurance athletes regularly show resting rates below forty beats per minute. Even recreational trainees see a meaningful drop within weeks.
Recovery Rate — the Real Measure of Fitness
How quickly heart rate drops after stopping exercise is one of the most accurate practical measures of fitness. The diagram below compares recovery from 160 bpm across three levels. Track your own one-minute drop — it improves measurably within weeks of consistent training.
A Coaching Observation
Training with Type 1 diabetes for over fifteen years has made me more attuned to cardiovascular responses than most people will ever need to be. Blood glucose directly affects heart rate, perceived effort and recovery. What I have learned — and what applies to everyone — is that the cardiovascular system gives you constant, accurate feedback if you pay attention. Heart rate, breathing rate, the feeling at high intensity — these are not arbitrary. They are precise information. Learning to read them is one of the most valuable skills in training, and it costs nothing but attention.
McArdle, W.D., Katch, F.I. & Katch, V.L. (2015). Exercise Physiology (8th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Tortora, G.J. & Derrickson, B. (2017). Principles of Anatomy and Physiology (15th ed.). Wiley.
NSCA (2016). Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning (4th ed.). Human Kinetics.
Bassett, D.R. & Howley, E.T. (2000). Limiting factors for maximum oxygen uptake. Med Sci Sports Exerc, 32(1), 70–84.
Diagrams: educational schematics created for oldschoolPT. Not anatomically precise.