beverly
New member
Can you drink too much water while hiking? I feel I need to drink lots of water on a long day of hiking, because I sweat a lot and have always followed the conventional wisdom - drink, drink, drink! On a warm summer day I can drink water or Gatorade all day long and hardly ever feel the need to pee.
Now, along comes a report from the New England Journal of Medicine that too much drinking can be dangerous and even deadly for endurance athletes.
An AP article on the study states that:
This article was written ahead of the Boston Marathon, which is on Monday.
The study was based on marathon runners, but is useful information for all endurance athletes. The study concluded that hyponatremia occurs in a substantial number of non-elite marathon runners.
So, when you're out there on those death marches or trail running this summer, drink up, but not so much! Drink just enough to replace your sweat loss, if you can figure out what that is.
Now, along comes a report from the New England Journal of Medicine that too much drinking can be dangerous and even deadly for endurance athletes.
An AP article on the study states that:
That's a pretty scary statistic. Runners who drank more than three liters, ran over 4 hours and gained (water) weight during the marathon were most at risk. Sports drinks aren't the answer, because they contain a lot more water than salt, and can contribute to the imbalance.Runners, hikers, bikers, even soldiers on long maneuvers should think twice before reaching for that water bottle: A study confirms that drinking too much can be dangerous, even deadly, for endurance athletes.
Researchers who studied 488 runners in the 2002 Boston Marathon found that 62, or more than one in eight, had a serious fluid and salt imbalance from drinking too much water or sports drinks. Three of them had extreme imbalances.
''More is definitely not better when it comes to fluids, but it's a hard message to get across,'' said Leslie Bonci, director of sports nutrition at Pittsburgh Medical Center.
Bonci and Almond said a good way to prevent problems is for athletes to weigh themselves before and after training sessions. If they gain significant weight, they should cut back on water intake until they find the right balance -- long before race day.
The goal is simply to replace water lost to sweating.
Severe cases are believed to have become more common with the growing popularity of endurance sports. In recent years, hyponatremia has killed several amateur marathon runners, as well as competitors in the Marine Corps Marathon.
This article was written ahead of the Boston Marathon, which is on Monday.
The study was based on marathon runners, but is useful information for all endurance athletes. The study concluded that hyponatremia occurs in a substantial number of non-elite marathon runners.
So, when you're out there on those death marches or trail running this summer, drink up, but not so much! Drink just enough to replace your sweat loss, if you can figure out what that is.