Keela Too
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Mod note: A number of posts have been moved from a useful study on this subject:
Compression Garment Reduces Orthostatic Tachycardia and Symptoms in Patients With [POTS], 2021, Bourne et al
This is very interesting. I use compression wear, and swear it helps keep me functioning longer.
Mostly I’ve just been using the socks, but after reading this last week, I dug out my compression leggings again (they come up quite high over my belly too) and used them at an event over this past weekend.
So, I do agility with my dogs. I don’t run, but I put in a load of effort for the 45 seconds or so we are in the ring together.
I am almost always light-headed as I exit, and I usually wobble a bit before plonking into a deckchair that I leave by the exit. After 5 or 10 mins with my head down, I start to feel back my normal again, though my heart rate takes longer to steady. (Friends know to leave me in peace during this time & my dogs just wait with me.
)
I’ve no doubt that this is the biggest risk I take with ME, but remarkably I seem to manage this sort of event better than social situations, where I can crash out quite fast, and take longer to come round, and have more PEM afterwards. Why is that? Who knows!.
Perhaps it is the very short duration of this effort, and the various mitigations I take that help me to cope? So here’s what I think helps:
- compression socks
- compression leggings (and yes, these were an improvement over the socks only, though they are icky uncomfortable to wear all day!)
- electrolyte drinks
- coffee
- I don’t eat before competing. (I’ve tested eating/not eating & definitely the latter is better for me.)
- earplugs - worn all day to reduce the background noise of dogs etc
- hat to reduce effect of light
- I socialise very little, and rest up in our camper van between rounds.
- I take planned rest in the days before/after (my husband always does all the dog-walking)
- ibuprofen taken on the day- I think it helps to reduce PEM later (which is currently fairly well managed
)
I guess I’m a bit mad doing this, but it was the first thing I wanted to do once I could walk about some more after my improvements in 2016. I have been training & competing since then.
It is what makes my heart sing:
PS Two clips here 1st one of Finn my older dog (he’s the one who cuddled up to me during my worst times prior to 2016) and then the wild child Bean (who actually won his class with this round
).
Compression Garment Reduces Orthostatic Tachycardia and Symptoms in Patients With [POTS], 2021, Bourne et al
This is very interesting. I use compression wear, and swear it helps keep me functioning longer.
Mostly I’ve just been using the socks, but after reading this last week, I dug out my compression leggings again (they come up quite high over my belly too) and used them at an event over this past weekend.
So, I do agility with my dogs. I don’t run, but I put in a load of effort for the 45 seconds or so we are in the ring together.
I am almost always light-headed as I exit, and I usually wobble a bit before plonking into a deckchair that I leave by the exit. After 5 or 10 mins with my head down, I start to feel back my normal again, though my heart rate takes longer to steady. (Friends know to leave me in peace during this time & my dogs just wait with me.

I’ve no doubt that this is the biggest risk I take with ME, but remarkably I seem to manage this sort of event better than social situations, where I can crash out quite fast, and take longer to come round, and have more PEM afterwards. Why is that? Who knows!.
Perhaps it is the very short duration of this effort, and the various mitigations I take that help me to cope? So here’s what I think helps:
- compression socks
- compression leggings (and yes, these were an improvement over the socks only, though they are icky uncomfortable to wear all day!)
- electrolyte drinks
- coffee
- I don’t eat before competing. (I’ve tested eating/not eating & definitely the latter is better for me.)
- earplugs - worn all day to reduce the background noise of dogs etc
- hat to reduce effect of light
- I socialise very little, and rest up in our camper van between rounds.
- I take planned rest in the days before/after (my husband always does all the dog-walking)
- ibuprofen taken on the day- I think it helps to reduce PEM later (which is currently fairly well managed

I guess I’m a bit mad doing this, but it was the first thing I wanted to do once I could walk about some more after my improvements in 2016. I have been training & competing since then.
It is what makes my heart sing:
PS Two clips here 1st one of Finn my older dog (he’s the one who cuddled up to me during my worst times prior to 2016) and then the wild child Bean (who actually won his class with this round

Last edited by a moderator: