No blood test proves overtraining, but a few markers give direction together with your symptoms. Overtraining is a combination of persistent fatigue, declining performance and disrupted recovery, not one abnormal value. Cortisol, CK and CRP help complete the picture.
Let me be honest up front: anyone selling you a stand-alone "overtraining test" is overstating it. The science is more cautious than the marketing.
What exactly is overtraining?
Overtraining is a prolonged imbalance between load and recovery, with performance that no longer returns after rest. The international consensus describes it as a syndrome of symptoms and markers together, diagnosed only after ruling out other causes (Meeusen, 2013). A few hard weeks is not yet overtraining.
The difference from ordinary fatigue is in the duration and in the lack of recovery after rest.
Which blood values change with overload?
With overload it is mostly your stress, muscle and inflammation markers that shift. No single value is proof on its own, but together with your feel and your training data they form a pattern.
| Marker | Possible signal |
|---|---|
| Cortisol | Chronically raised stress response |
| CK (creatine kinase) | Persistent muscle damage and incomplete recovery |
| CRP and hs-CRP | Low-grade inflammation |
| Testosterone | Can fall with prolonged overload |
| Ferritin | Rules out iron deficiency as a cause |
Research into hormonal and biochemical markers shows that patterns, not single values, say the most (Cadegiani, 2019).
What does CK say after hard training?
CK rises after any unusual or heavy training, so it is normally raised in athletes. Creatine kinase leaks from muscle fibres after exertion and usually peaks 24 to 72 hours later. A high CK on its own means muscle load, not disease (Brancaccio, 2007).
If CK stays structurally high while you rest and recover poorly, that is a signal to take seriously.
How do you use blood values in overtraining?
Use blood values to support your feel and your training log, not as a stand-alone diagnosis. Measure at rest and compare with an earlier measurement from a good period, because the trend says more than a snapshot. Rule out ordinary causes first, such as iron deficiency or too little sleep.
Compose your own recovery panel through our custom blood test. Also read blood values for endurance athletes and magnesium for athletes.
My advice: treat these markers as puzzle pieces, not an oracle. If symptoms and reduced performance persist despite rest, discuss it with your GP or sports physician.
References
- Meeusen R, Duclos M, Foster C, et al. Prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of the overtraining syndrome: joint consensus statement of the European College of Sport Science and the American College of Sports Medicine. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. 2013. PMID: 23247672.
- Brancaccio P, Maffulli N, Limongelli FM. Creatine kinase monitoring in sport medicine. British Medical Bulletin. 2007. PMID: 17569697.
- Cadegiani FA, Kater CE. Basal hormones and biochemical markers as predictors of overtraining syndrome in male athletes: the EROS-BASAL study. Journal of Athletic Training. 2019. PMID: 31386577.
Disclaimer
Every blood test result includes a professional assessment by a BIG-registered doctor. This article gives general information and is not a substitute for medical advice. A blood test is a tool to walk into the conversation with your GP better informed, not a diagnosis in itself. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
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