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Dehydration


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#1 bobdrake12

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Posted 09 October 2002 - 12:58 AM


http://news.bbc.co.u...ion/2309107.stm

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Tuesday, 8 October, 2002, 12:17 GMT 13:17 UK

Too thirsty for knowledge (excerpts)

By Sean Coughlan - BBC News Online's education staff



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Pupils at Westdene bring water bottles to school

Can you imagine spending every day at work with a hangover?

That is the nearest adults will come to the feelings of dehydration experienced by children who have little access to water during the school day.

So says a campaigner who argues that learning is being damaged by a simple lack of water in classrooms.

And a project in Brighton is examining whether a bottle of water could be schools' secret weapon in improving test results.

Hilary Reed, a teacher with the Brighton and Hove learning support service, says that dehydration is contributing to academic underachievement and poor behaviour.

"Day after day, I come across tired, lethargic and irritable children, unable to concentrate - often due to dehydration," she says.

"I also witness a succession of children going into the school sick-room with stomach aches and headaches, mostly all 'curable' with a drink of water."

#2 bobdrake12

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Posted 09 October 2002 - 01:02 AM

http://news.bbc.co.u...tion/728017.stm

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Thursday, 27 April, 2000, 12:44 GMT 13:44 UK

Water improves school test results (excerpts)


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Water refreshes the parts of the brain that others can't reach



An experiment in Scotland claims that pupils' test results improve if they drink more water.

Pupils at Corstorphine School in Edinburgh have been drinking water throughout the primary school day - and have seen test results improving to the extent that they have already exceeded targets set for 2002.

The theory under consideration is that the human brain uses water in its transmission of neural messages - and that if children are regularly hydrated their brains are better physically equipped to learn.

The school's assistant head, Carol Wood, says that pupils bring bottles of water to school and can drink from them whenever they wish - and that the increased intake of water is now part of the classroom scene.

Dehydrated

Apart from any benefit to children's brains, Ms Wood also says that regular consumption of water has more general health benefits - and that it prevents children from becoming dehydrated throughout the day.

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#3 bobdrake12

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Posted 09 October 2002 - 01:10 AM

http://news.bbc.co.u...ion/2048898.stm

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Monday, 17 June, 2002, 04:00 GMT 05:00 UK

Water coolers to help pupils think (excerpts)


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Children's attention span suffers without water


A campaign has been launched in Yorkshire schools to encourage children to drink more water to increase their concentration.

Studies have found that children who are dehydrated do not work as well in the classroom as those who have drunk the recommended eight glasses of water a day.

Yorkshire Water has run a pilot project in Leeds in which water coolers were put in three schools.

There was a significant increase in the amount of water the children drank and the company now plans to put the coolers in every primary school in Yorkshire over the next three years.

One of the schools involved in the pilot was Otley Ashfield Primary in north Leeds.

Head teacher Yvonne Davison said she supported the initiative "wholeheartedly".

"All brain activity is neurological and is a chemical activity which doesn't function without water.

"Children who are dehydrated don't learn well."

Dr Martin Schweiger, a consultant at Leeds Health Protection Unit, said dehydration in childhood can cause serious health problems in adults.

#4 bobdrake12

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Posted 09 October 2002 - 01:20 AM

http://www.healthfor.../prevention.htm


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Complications Resulting from Lack of Water:

Evidence suggests that the following diseases may be further complicated by chronic dehydration. Drinking the recommended 8-10 eight-ounce glasses of water per day may have a significant impact. People generally drink less due to the inconvenience of frequent urination . . . a small price to pay for better health. If the urine is not a very pale yellow, or even clear, you are not getting enough water (does not apply to those taking B-complex vitamins as these turn the urine bright yellow). The following information has been compiled from a variety of sources, and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult a Physician, and follow any prescribed therapy.

Heartburn:

Heartburn may be a signal of water shortage in the upper part of the gastrointestinal tract. It may be a major thirst signal of the human body. The use of antacids or tablet medications in the treatment of this pain does not correct dehydration, and the body may continue to suffer as a result of its water shortage. Not recognizing heartburn as a potential sign of dehydration, and treating it exclusively with antacids and pill medications may produce inflammation of the stomach and duodenum, hiatal hernia, ulceration, and eventual disease in the gastrointestinal tract, including the liver and pancreas. Adequate hydration may be a simple and effective remedy.

Arthritis:

Rheumatoid joint pain (arthritis) affects both young and old, and may be a signal of water shortage in the painful joint. The use of pain-killers may not completely cure the problem, and may expose the person to further damage resulting from prolonged effects of the pain medication. Drinking the recommended quantity of water may help this problem, and should cause no adverse effects.

Back pain:

Low back pain and ankylosing arthritis of the spine may be signs of water shortage in the spinal column and discs (the spinal cushions that support the weight of the body). Further complications may lead to osteoarthritis, which results when the cartilage cells in the joints have died. It produces deformity of the spine, and crippling deformities of the limbs. Recognizing arthritis and low back pain as potential signs of dehydration in the joint cavities, and maintaining the recommended amount of water intake may help to relieve these conditions.

Migraines:

Migraine headache may be a sign that water is needed by the brain and the eyes. Migraine may be prevented by keeping dehydration from establishing in the body, and may be relieved by treating for dehydration. This particular type of dehydration might eventually cause inflammation of the back of the eye and damage to eyesight. Drinking the recommended amount of water daily may provide relief.

Colitis:

Colitis pain may be a signal of water shortage in the large gut. It is associated with constipation because the large intestine constricts to squeeze too much water from the excrement. The result is a lack of water lubrication. Not recognizing colitis pain as a potential sign of dehydration and increasing water intake may cause persistent constipation, which can result in fecal impacting, verticulitis, hemorrhoids, polyps and other diseases of the colon and rectum. Maintaining hydration may help colitis sufferers.

Asthma:

Asthma affects 12,000,000 children and kills several thousand every year. Complications may result from dehydration and the body's natural drought management programs. Free passage of air is obstructed so that water vapor from the lungs does not leave the body. Drinking the recommended daily amount of water may help to prevent asthma attacks, and to dilute the mucus plugs in the lungs that obstruct the free flow of air in and out of the air sacs.

High blood pressure:

Hypertension may result when there is not enough water to fill all the blood vessels that diffuse water into vital cells. Part of the body's transport mechanism is reverse osmosis - when water from the serum is filtered and injected into important cells through minute holes in their membranes. The body injects water into tens of trillions of cells all at the same time, and extra pressure may be needed for the injection process if there is insufficient water. Not recognizing hypertension as a possible indicator of dehydration, and treating it exclusively with diuretics may further dehydrate the body. The result may be potential blockage of the heart arteries and the arteries that go to the brain by cholesterol. When blocked, heart attacks and small or massive strokes that paralyze can occur. Hypertension may also eventually cause kidney disease, and possible brain damage and neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease. Drinking the recommended quantity of water daily may be beneficial.

Adult-onset diabetes:

Adult-onset diabetes may be an adaptive state to severe dehydration of the human body. The release of insulin may be inhibited to prevent the insulin from pushing water into all of the body's cells. The result is that only some cells may get survival rations of water so that the brain's priority water needs are met, and adequate water is kept in circulation. Diabetes may cause massive damage to blood vessels all over the body, resulting in the eventual loss of toes, feet and legs from gangrene. It may also cause eye damage and possible blindness. Providing the body with an adequate water supply may help this condition.

Blood cholesterol:

High cholesterol levels may be an indicator of early drought management by the body. Cholesterol is a clay-like material that may be poured into the gaps of some cell membranes to safeguard them from losing their vital water content to the osmotically more powerful blood circulating in their vicinity. Cholesterol is used to manufacture nerve cell membranes and hormones, and may also be used as a "shield" against water taxation of other vital cells that would normally exchange water through their cell membranes. Drinking the recommended daily amount of water may help lower "bad" cholesterol levels.

Others:

Depression, loss of libido, chronic fatigue syndrome, lupus, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, kidney stones - these conditions may be complicated by prolonged chronic dehydration. Increasing water intake so the body becomes regularly hydrated may be beneficial. With these conditions, exercising one's muscles should is a good addition to the treatment program.


Copyright 2001, Healthforge

#5 Mind

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Posted 09 October 2002 - 04:16 PM

Hey Bob... isn't it amazing how so many common sense/pratical means of staying healthy make headlines nowadays? Balanced diet, enough water, raw veggies/fruits, washing hands...etc. I do not know about everyone else, but my parents taught me all of this when I was growing up. Good thing too. Which reminds me...I'm thirsty...lol

#6 bobdrake12

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Posted 10 October 2002 - 12:46 AM

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Mind,

Great hearing from you! :D

I used to think my parents were mean because they wouldn't let us eat fast foods and drink soft drinks. They even made us drink water. [angry]

I find it interesting that one of the first things the vets (that I take my cats to) do is to check for dehydration. I wonder how many doctors that treat humans do that? ;)

I also find it interesting that a preschool website appears to be promoting what appears to be fast foods.

bob

Note the article further below that states, "....hamburgers and carbonated drinks such as sodas can wind up causing dehydration."

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http://www.preschool.../ecdinner.shtml


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© Copyright 1997-2002 by Preschool Education

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http://www.canoe.ca/...dration-ap.html

Fast food raises risk of dehydration


WASHINGTON (AP) -- What athletes take in may dry them out. Fast foods like hamburgers and carbonated drinks such as sodas can wind up causing dehydration, experts say.

Sugary, caffeine-packed soft drinks, in particular, can cause trouble, said Dr. Gary I. Wadler of New York University School of Medicine. A cola's sugar and the carbonation can make a person feel full without providing enough liquid.

"They are very sweet, so you get bloated. They are gaseous, so they distend you, so you get more bloated," Wadler said. And caffeine, which tends to increase the flow of urine, "is a double whammy," he said. "You lose on all counts."

Former tennis star Jimmy Connors used to be one of Wadler's patients.

"He used to get these horrific total body cramps. It was sort of a mystery," Wadler said. "I found out he was drinking cola drinks in great quantity, and he was getting bloated. Because he was bloated, he was not drinking adequate fluids."

The risk is not limited to sodas, researchers say. Protein breakdown requires water, and the protein in a couple of fast-food hamburgers can leave people dehydrated, a researcher said.

"We didn't have to make them sweat," said nutrition researcher Catherine Jackson who conducted a dehydration study. "The hamburger meat was enough."

Although her study did not measure athletic performance, the amount of dehydration would have been enough to make an endurance athlete perform worse, said Jackson, who works at California State University, Fresno, and is also spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. The study was conducted to help NASA develop rehydration fluids for astronauts. It was published as a NASA internal memo in 1992.

Time spent sleeping also leaves people dehydrated, so the researchers had their test subjects eat the burgers before bedtime, to make the dehydration worse.

A separate study presented last month in New Orleans at Experimental Biology 2002, a conference of seven research-oriented professional societies, found that athletes who took in more protein wound up more dehydrated.

"The concern is that increasing protein increases the work the kidney has to do, and can impact the amount of fluid needed to get rid of waste," said researcher Nancy Rodriguez of the University of Connecticut.

That study, led by graduate student William F. Martin, examined five members of the university's track team. The athletes were placed on supervised high-, medium- and low-protein diets. All the athletes spent a month on each level. "We fed them everything they ate for the four weeks of the diet," said Rodriguez, senior author of the preliminary report.

The low-protein diet worked out to about 68 grams a day for a 150-pound person; the medium-protein, to 123 grams; and the high-protein, to 246 grams.

The low-protein diet was mostly grains, augmented by some beef and dairy foods, Rodriguez said. The medium-protein diet was equivalent to the level that most people normally have, she said. The high-level diet was mostly meat, supplemented by nutrition bars to add to the protein intake, she said.

The high level would be very unusual, but not uncommon for body builders, football players and others trying to add much muscle, Rodriguez said.

The athletes also got bottled water, and filled out forms each day on how much water they drank from any source, Rodriguez said. "I was very conscious of keeping them hydrated," she said.

As the amount of protein rose, the athletes' kidneys had to work harder as the body tried to get rid of the excess protein, the study found. There was a higher proportion of protein breakdown chemicals such as nitrogen in the urine of athletes on the high-protein diet.

The researchers took those findings as signs that athletes on high-protein diets were losing more water. And because there was no evidence the athletes were drinking more, the scientists concluded the men were dehydrated.

It doesn't take much dehydration to reduce an athlete's ability to perform. Being about one per cent below optimal fluid level can reduce exercise performance. Rodriguez said her study did not test performance because testing could have impaired the athletes' readiness to compete.

But the athletes did not notice being more thirsty, and did not report drinking more, as their protein levels rose, the study found.

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#7 bobdrake12

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Posted 10 October 2002 - 02:45 AM

http://www.organicon.....XINS ABBV.htm

DEHYDRATION & TOXINS (excerpts)


DEHYDRATION & DANGER

Scientists have discovered that about 80% of people in the developed and developing nations are dehydrated. It is difficult to detect dehydration as 66% of the water loss is inside the body’s cells. By the time we feel thirsty it may be too late. And as we age, we are less sensitive to feeling thirsty.

Moderate dehydration can cause headaches, dizziness, fatigue, and confusion, whereas severe dehydration can cause high blood pressure, stress, irritability, depression, and muscular pain. Continuous dehydration can cause chronic ailments, like allergy, dry skin, pre-aging, gout, arthritis, hypertension, heart palpitation, bladder and urinal diseases, kidney and liver ailments, dementia, alzheimer disease, constipation, and a host of life threatening diseases, including cancer.

It has been found that dehydration cannot be detected in blood tests; however, other tests have indicated that water losses occur as follows: about 66% inside the cells, about 26% in the fluid surrounding the cells, and only 8% from inside the blood vessels.




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