

No level of low body water is acceptable for achieving optimal athletic performance and endurance, so athletes must develop personal strategies for maintaining optimal body water while exercising. Imagine a full glass of water represents your body in a state of optimal hydration. When not exercising, it's like having a pinhole in the bottom of the glass. The water level will drop, but only at a very slow rate and at a pace that makes it easy for you to maintain an optimal hydration state. Because the water level drops so slowly, drinking an occasional glass of water or other fluid is an adequate means of maintaining hydration state. Now consider what happens when you exercise, which is equivalent to putting a pencil hole in the bottom of the glass: The rate of water loss is much faster. Within even a short period of time, the amount of water loss could be enough to affect exercise performance and endurance. Waiting to drink in this situation is not a reasonable option. If the frequency of drinking when not exercising is once every 2 hours, then the frequency of drinking during exercise should be once every 10 to 15 minutes. Water is lost so quickly during exercise that it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to replace the amount of water being lost and virtually impossible to increase body water while exercising. Waiting too long between drinks causes body water to decrease such that it cannot be adequately replaced. If you wait to drink you may be able to maintain the body's water level at its current state, but that state will be too low.
Without fluid intake, blood volume will quickly drop, sweat rates will drop, and body heat will rise quickly and dangerously, at the rate of approximately 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius) every 5 to 7 minutes. Because it is so difficult to consume sufficient fluids during hard physical work, athletes should develop a fixed drinking schedule. With a loss of 1 liter of water per hour, athletes should find a way to drink 4 cups of water per hour. Athletes losing 2 liters of water per hour need to drink more than 8 cups of water per hour. Of course, it's difficult to know precisely how much water is being lost during activity, but a simple technique can help an athlete estimate how much is lost. One liter of water weighs approximately 2 pounds, and 1 pint of water weighs approximately 1 pound. By knowing these relationships, athletes can estimate how much fluid should be consumed during physical activity by doing the following:
Table 3.7 Effects of Dehydration on Aerobic Endurance Performance
Example: If John weighs 4 pounds less after a 2-hour football practice, he should consume an additional 4 pints (8 cups) of fluid during that practice. He was already consuming 2 cups of fluid, so John's total fluid consumption should be 10 cups of fluid per 2-hour practice. In 2 hours there are 12 10-minute time increments, so John has 12 opportunities to consume 10 cups of fluid. Therefore, John should consume 6.5 ounces of fluid, or a bit more than 3/4 of a cup (10÷12 = .8), every 10 minutes or 13 ounces of fluid (about 1.5 cups) every 20 minutes.


