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JOURNAL OF
SPORTS SCIENCE & MEDICINE
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WATER-INDUCED HYPERHYDRATION INCREASES TOTAL BODY WATER TO A GREATER EXTENT THAN GLYCEROL-INDUCED HYPERHYDRATION: A CASE STUDY OF A TRAINED TRIATHLETE
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| ABSTRACT | |||||||||||
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Glycerol-induced hyperhydration (GIH) prior to endurance exercise is
a strategy that is increasingly used by athletes. Compared with water-induced
hyperhydration (WIH), GIH has been shown to reduce diuresis, thereby increasing
total body water (TBW). It has never been demonstrated that WIH proved
to be more efficient than GIH for increasing TBW. Therefore, we report
the case of a trained triathlete in whom WIH, compared with GIH, increased
TBW during a 110-min hydration protocol. On two separate days the subject
ingested, in a randomized double blind fashion, either 26 ml.kg-1
body mass (BM) of water or 26 ml.kg-1 BM of water with 1.2
g glycerol.kg-1 BM. Compared with GIH, WIH increased TBW by
an additional 511 ml. It is proposed that WIH was effective in decreasing
urine output and, therefore, in augmenting TBW, because the water ingested
during this treatment was integrated into the body fluid pools relatively
more slowly than that ingested during GIH. Practically, this finding implies
that it could thus be possible for researchers and athletes to find out
that on occasion WIH increases TBW more than GIH over a period of hydration
of 2 h.
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