Hyperhydration: tolerance and cardiovascular effects during uncompensable exercise-heat stress
United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick 01760-5007; and Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215 This study examined the efficacy of glycerol and water hyperhydration (1 h before exercise) on tolerance and cardiovascular strain during uncompensable exercise-heat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physiology (1985) 1998-06, Vol.84 (6), p.1858-1864 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine,
Natick 01760-5007; and Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts
02215
This study examined the efficacy of glycerol and
water hyperhydration (1 h before exercise) on tolerance and
cardiovascular strain during uncompensable exercise-heat stress. The
approach was to determine whether 1-h preexercise hyperhydration (29.1 ml H 2 O/kg lean body mass with or
without 1.2 g/kg lean body mass of glycerol) provided a physiological
advantage over euhydration. Eight heat-acclimated men completed three
trials (control euhydration before exercise, and glycerol and water
hyperhydrations) consisting of treadmill exercise-heat stress (ratio of
evaporative heat loss required to maximal capacity of climate = 416).
During exercise (~55% maximal
O 2 uptake), there was no
difference between glycerol and water hyperhydration methods for
increasing ( P 0.05) core temperature, whole body sweating rate, cardiac output, blood pressure, total peripheral resistance, or core temperature tolerance. Exhaustion from heat strain occurred at similar core and skin temperatures and
heart rates in each trial. Symptoms at exhaustion included syncope and
ataxia, fatigue, dyspnea, and muscle cramps
( n = 11, 10, 2, and 1 cases,
respectively). We conclude that 1-h preexercise glycerol
hyperhydration provides no meaningful physiological advantage over
water hyperhydration and that hyperhydration per se only provides the
advantage (over euhydration) of delaying hypohydration during
uncompensble exercise-heat stress.
cardiac output; core temperature; fluid replacement; glycerol; heat
stress; hydration; sweating; heat tolerance; physiological tolerance |
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ISSN: | 8750-7587 1522-1601 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jappl.1998.84.6.1858 |