Flu-like Symptoms After Exercise

Why You Experience Flu-Like Symptoms After Exercise

Why You Experience Flu-Like Symptoms After Exercise
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Feeling sick after a workout can be discouraging, but it's not uncommon. Flu-like symptoms after exercising can be due to a number of factors like dehydration, low blood sugar, or overexertion.

Dehydration

Sweaty workouts can cause you to lose fluids and electrolytes. Cleveland Clinic notes that not replacing them can lead to symptoms of dehydration, like fatigue, muscle soreness, and nausea and vomiting..

Drinking plenty of fluids and making sure you are properly hydrated before intense exercise can help prevent symptoms of dehydration, according to a review published in 2023 in Sports Medicine.

Low Blood Sugar

According to a review published in Sports in 2019, not eating enough before exercise can lead to low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). Hypoglycemia can cause flu-like symptoms, like nausea, clamminess, or dizziness, notes the American Diabetes Association.

Eating a light snack before working out may help prevent symptoms of low blood sugar.

Working Out After Eating

Eating a large meal or a meal high in fat or fiber before exercising can increase abdominal discomfort, according to a review published in 2025 in World Journal of Gastroenterology. This can cause undigested food to stay in your stomach longer, leading to feelings of nausea. Researchers note that this is particularly true during high-intensity or endurance exercises.

Changing the timing of meals or eating lighter meals before exercising can help prevent unpleasant gastrointestinal symptoms.

Overexercising

Consistently pushing your body too far during workouts or exercising too often can cause flu-like symptoms, like persistent muscle soreness and fatigue, notes Cleveland Clinic. It can also lower your body's ability to fight off colds and infections.

According to a review published in 2023 in Dietetics, prolonged, strenuous exercise can also lead to exercise-induced gastrointestinal syndrome (EIGS), which often causes nausea.

How to Prevent Flu-Like Symptoms After Exercising

If you experience flu-like symptoms after working out, here are some steps you can take to prevent them:

  • Make sure to stay hydrated, especially when exercising.
  • Try spacing out higher-intensity workouts to give your body time to recover.
  • Eat a carbohydrate-rich snack to give your body energy before you hit the gym.
  • Avoid heavy meals before exercising.
EDITORIAL SOURCES
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Monique Richard, MS, RDN, LDN, FAND, IFNCP, RYT-200

Medical Reviewer

Monique Richard is an award-winning registered and licensed dietitian-nutritionist (RDN, LDN) and nationally recognized nutrition expert who brings a deeply integrative, person-centered lens to nutrition and lifestyle medicine. She is the owner of Nutrition-In-Sight, a private practice providing personalized nutrition counseling, media communications, and consulting.

Monique holds a master of science (MS) in clinical nutrition with a minor in psychology, is an Integrative and functional nutrition certified practitioner (IFNCP), and a registered yoga teacher (RYT), offering a uniquely holistic approach to health and healing.

Monique serves as faculty at the University of Western States (UWS), where she teaches a class on success and sustainability in private practice to doctoral students in UWS’s doctor of clinical nutrition (DCN) program. She has worked in outpatient primary care settings serving individuals and families across the lifespan and health spectrum and is a sought-after writer, speaker, and media contributor. She is a former national media spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and completed a fellowship with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Foundation developing a first-ever advanced training program in integrative and functional nutrition.

Her passion for food security, sustainability, sharing food stories, and preserving cultural heritage have led to professional contributions that have included international teaching, public health outreach, and academic presentations in Haiti, Egypt, China, India, Italy, and Israel. She has held numerous leadership roles in a variety of professional, nonprofit and public health organizations.

Serving as a past president of the International Affiliate of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (IAAND), Monique continues to lead and advocate across clinical, academic, and media spaces, striving to make evidence-based, practice-informed nutrition accessible, engaging, and actionable for all.

Kay Ireland

Author

Kay Ireland specializes in health, fitness, and lifestyle topics. She is a support worker in the neonatal intensive care and antepartum units of her local hospital and recently became a certified group fitness instructor.