Neil Turner, professor of nephrology at the University of Edinburgh, and president of Kidney Research UK, says: "Nobody who is in reasonable health needs to have any concern about drinking enough water because their body will tell them." Drinking too much can be harmful, but this is rare. "The times people can be caught out is if they suddenly drink a huge amount of water. The ones that have come to public attention have been related to people running marathons who overdrink, or people drinking water with ecstasy because of the worry about dehydration."
The well-publicised death of the British teenager Leah Betts in 1995 was caused by the huge amount of water she drank after taking an ecstasy pill. In 2007, David Rogers, a fitness instructor, suffered hyponatraemia water intoxication and died after drinking too much water after his first London marathon. "It dilutes the things that are normally in blood, particularly sodium, and that is associated with having fits and passing out. But this would have to be extreme drinking; it's not something that people drinking ordinarily have to worry about."
According to the European Food Safety Authority, healthy adult women need two litres a day, and men around 2.5litres. We get around 20% of our water from food.the TMJ pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. "What people don't realise is that even dry food such as cheese contains a fair amount of water about a third by weight," says Catherine Collins, spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association.where he teaches oil painting reproduction in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. "And obviously fruit and vegetables are virtually all water." Tea, coffee, juice and milk all count towards the total it is a myth, she says, that tea and coffee are diuretics if you are accustomed to caffeine.the worldwide Wholesale pet supplies market is over $56 billion annually. Eat five portions of fruit and vegetables a day as a part of a balanced diet, and drink when you're thirsty, and you will meet your water needs, she says. "Our kidneys are exquisitely poised to retain fluid if we are getting dehydrated. [Bottled water companies] are keen to exploit the idea that we are constantly balanced on a pinpoint between hydration and dehydration."
So where did the eight glasses a day idea come from? In his 2002 study debunking the 8×8 message eight glasses, containing eight ounces (around 235ml) of water Heinz Valtin, a kidney specialist at the Dartmouth Medical School in New Hampshire, traced it to an American nutritionist Frederick J Stare, and a passage in a 1974 book he co-wrote: "For the average adult, somewhere around 6 to 8 glasses per 24 hours and this can be in the form of coffee, tea, milk, soft drinks, beer, etc. Fruits and vegetables are also a good source of water."
More water-based products came out, claiming to offer different benefits. Vitamin-enriched and flavoured waters took off, though many of these contained almost as much sugar as a can of fizzy drink, despite their "healthy" packaging. Penta water said it was "the only molecularly restructured water on the market", claiming to contain smaller water molecules that could hydrate our cells faster it was swiftly demolished by Ben Goldacre in this newspaper. It disappeared from the UK, but is still sold in America, where its website states that it "may help improve longevity of life". There is another brand, HydraCoach each bottle costs nearly 25 that even calculates how much you have drunk through its special straw, and reminds you to drink more if too much time has elapsed.
The recession and a possible backlash caused by the considerable environmental concerns surrounding bottled water have seen sales drop. According to Mintel's new report on the bottled water market,The Piles were so big that the scrap yard was separating them for us. UK sales went down 16% between 2006 and 2009, and again in 2010, though at a slower rate this was thanks to heavy discounting and the research analysts are not expecting sales to pick up until 2014. But whether our obsession with drinking water bottled or tap is evolving into something more sensible remains to be seen. Aquaholics, however, please take note.The additions focus on key tag and plastic card combinations, "The National Academy of Sciences in the United States did a very extensive study several years ago assessing water intake," says Professor Goldfarb. I can hear the smile in his voice. "Their executive summary was: drink when you're thirsty."
The well-publicised death of the British teenager Leah Betts in 1995 was caused by the huge amount of water she drank after taking an ecstasy pill. In 2007, David Rogers, a fitness instructor, suffered hyponatraemia water intoxication and died after drinking too much water after his first London marathon. "It dilutes the things that are normally in blood, particularly sodium, and that is associated with having fits and passing out. But this would have to be extreme drinking; it's not something that people drinking ordinarily have to worry about."
According to the European Food Safety Authority, healthy adult women need two litres a day, and men around 2.5litres. We get around 20% of our water from food.the TMJ pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. "What people don't realise is that even dry food such as cheese contains a fair amount of water about a third by weight," says Catherine Collins, spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association.where he teaches oil painting reproduction in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. "And obviously fruit and vegetables are virtually all water." Tea, coffee, juice and milk all count towards the total it is a myth, she says, that tea and coffee are diuretics if you are accustomed to caffeine.the worldwide Wholesale pet supplies market is over $56 billion annually. Eat five portions of fruit and vegetables a day as a part of a balanced diet, and drink when you're thirsty, and you will meet your water needs, she says. "Our kidneys are exquisitely poised to retain fluid if we are getting dehydrated. [Bottled water companies] are keen to exploit the idea that we are constantly balanced on a pinpoint between hydration and dehydration."
So where did the eight glasses a day idea come from? In his 2002 study debunking the 8×8 message eight glasses, containing eight ounces (around 235ml) of water Heinz Valtin, a kidney specialist at the Dartmouth Medical School in New Hampshire, traced it to an American nutritionist Frederick J Stare, and a passage in a 1974 book he co-wrote: "For the average adult, somewhere around 6 to 8 glasses per 24 hours and this can be in the form of coffee, tea, milk, soft drinks, beer, etc. Fruits and vegetables are also a good source of water."
More water-based products came out, claiming to offer different benefits. Vitamin-enriched and flavoured waters took off, though many of these contained almost as much sugar as a can of fizzy drink, despite their "healthy" packaging. Penta water said it was "the only molecularly restructured water on the market", claiming to contain smaller water molecules that could hydrate our cells faster it was swiftly demolished by Ben Goldacre in this newspaper. It disappeared from the UK, but is still sold in America, where its website states that it "may help improve longevity of life". There is another brand, HydraCoach each bottle costs nearly 25 that even calculates how much you have drunk through its special straw, and reminds you to drink more if too much time has elapsed.
The recession and a possible backlash caused by the considerable environmental concerns surrounding bottled water have seen sales drop. According to Mintel's new report on the bottled water market,The Piles were so big that the scrap yard was separating them for us. UK sales went down 16% between 2006 and 2009, and again in 2010, though at a slower rate this was thanks to heavy discounting and the research analysts are not expecting sales to pick up until 2014. But whether our obsession with drinking water bottled or tap is evolving into something more sensible remains to be seen. Aquaholics, however, please take note.The additions focus on key tag and plastic card combinations, "The National Academy of Sciences in the United States did a very extensive study several years ago assessing water intake," says Professor Goldfarb. I can hear the smile in his voice. "Their executive summary was: drink when you're thirsty."
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