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Published in: Sports Medicine 4-5/2007

01-04-2007 | Conference Paper

Hydration in the Marathon

Using Thirst to Gauge Safe Fluid Replacement

Author: Professor Timothy D. Noakes

Published in: Sports Medicine | Issue 4-5/2007

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Abstract

Early human ancestors evolved hunting in the midday heat on the dry African savannah and developed favourable biological adaptations that permit prolonged running in the heat. These physiological adaptations must have included the capacity to sweat profusely to maintain a low body temperature when running for 4–6 hours in dry heat, an absence of adverse consequences from developing mild to moderate fluid deficits caused by sweat losses during the hunt, a serum osmolality based thirst mechanism and the ability to ‘outrun their thirst’ (to resist the deleterious psychological and other effects of severe thirst). Until the early 1970s, the guidelines for fluid ingestion during exercise were not to drink and are consistent with this interpretation. By 1996, guidelines stated, “individuals should be encouraged to consume the maximal amount of fluids during exercise that can be tolerated without gastrointestinal discomfort up to a rate equal to that lost from sweating,” and this was interpreted by some as “to drink as much as tolerable.” This article argues that humans are designed to drink just enough to maintain plasma osmolality, not necessarily bodyweight, both at rest and during exercise. Drinking to maintain bodyweight may impair exercise performance by inducing a weight penalty and may increase the probability of exercise-associated hyponatraemia in slow marathon runners.
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Metadata
Title
Hydration in the Marathon
Using Thirst to Gauge Safe Fluid Replacement
Author
Professor Timothy D. Noakes
Publication date
01-04-2007
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Sports Medicine / Issue 4-5/2007
Print ISSN: 0112-1642
Electronic ISSN: 1179-2035
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2165/00007256-200737040-00050

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