DALLAS - April 13, 2005 - Drinking water during
a long-distance race may do serious harm rather than keep you safe from injury
if you're drinking too much, according to a cardiologist at UT Southwestern
Medical Center.
Runners or any long-distance athletes who drink too much water during a race
could put themselves at jeopardy for developing hyponatremia, a condition marked
by a loss in the body's sodium content that can result in physical symptoms such
as lethargy, disorientation, seizures and even respiratory distress.
In a perspectives article in the current issue of The New England Journal of
Medicine, Dr.
Benjamin Levine, professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern, said
competitive runners are less likely to suffer from hyponatremia.
"Those who are running to finish the race very fast don't have time to
drink a lot of water along the way," Dr. Levine said. "Those who are
not running the race competitively tend to stop at every water station and take
a drink. Over the course of a long race, they can dilute themselves."
In addition popular sports drinks don't always include enough sodium to offset
the body's loss of the mineral during exercise. The drinks often carry more
water with smaller concentrations of salts than are normally found in the human
body; therefore, they do not replace salts adequately, said Dr. Levine, medical
director of the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine, a
collaboration between UT Southwestern and Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas.
The NEJM perspectives article accompanies a study in the same journal
by researchers at Children's Hospital in Boston and Harvard Medical School. The
study evaluates the blood concentration of sodium in runners both before and
after a long race and examines their risk factors for developing hyponatremia.
It recommends individualized fluid-replacement consumption by all competing
athletes.
"Researchers of the study found a surprisingly large number of runners had
actually gained weight during the race and their sodium concentrations were very
low - some were dangerously low," Dr. Levine said. "The
recommendations listed in the study that fluid-replacement schedules be
individualized for all athletes competing in long-distance events should be
taken seriously by all competitors."
People lose water and salts from their bodies at different rates during
exercise, he said. Heat and humidity also play a role in the rate of this loss.
Calculating fluid loss is as simple as weighing yourself before and after
exercise and comparing that number to the amount of fluid you consumed
throughout.
"All serious distance athletes should find out what their rate of fluid
loss is and individualize their fluid intake prior to a distance event,"
Dr. Levine said. "It's also good to accept some mild dehydration during a
long race. There are plenty of Web sites available now that show how to
customize your fluid intake."
He also added that taking along salty snacks to eat during the race is a good
way of combating hyponatremia. Generally, athletes of all types are instructed
prior to activities that water consumption is necessary to prevent illness from
heat and to maintain performance levels.
It is also clear, however, that fixed global recommendations for fluid
replacement may not be optimal for individual athletes of different body types
and with varying degrees of training and heat acclimatization.
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Media Contact: Katherine Morales
214-648-3404
e-mail: katherine.morales@utsouthwestern.edu
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