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Marathon
Dilemma: How
Much Water Is Too Much?
Excerpt
By Natalie
Engler,
Reuters Health
Today, as Boston Marathon runners push their sinewy bodies over
"heartbreak hill" and dash past throngs of cheering fans, many
will do something unusual: stop and step on a scale.
The scales, positioned in Red Cross
stations every mile throughout the second half of the course,
have nothing to do with an obsession with being svelte. Rather,
they are part of a new push to protect runners from hyponatremia,
a rare condition that claimed the life of a healthy 28-year-old
woman who collapsed during last year's race.
Only a handful of people have died
from the condition, in which their blood sodium concentration
falls to an abnormally low level, usually from drinking too much
water. But the risk of suffering from its symptoms during a marathon
is higher than most people think.
Dr. John Cianca, medical director
for the Houston Marathon and a sports medicine physician from
Baylor College of Medicine, said that over the past five years
he has seen close to 80 cases of moderate or mild hyponatremia.
Moreover, in clinical studies,
he and his team of researchers discovered that almost 85 percent
of the subjects had lowered blood sodium levels during or after
running a marathon. Nearly 25 percent had levels below 135 milliEquivalent
(mEq) per liter of blood, the point at which a diagnosis is made
(136-142 is considered normal).
He and his colleague, Dr. Joseph
Chorley, presented their latest findings here at the American
Medical Athletic Association's 32nd annual sports medicine symposium.
Hyponatremia presents a particularly
vexing problem for runners and race medical staff, because many
of its symptoms -- throbbing headache, nausea, cramps, and dizziness
-- mirror those of dehydration.
But the standard treatment for
dehydration, pushing fluids by mouth or intravenously, can prompt
the brain or the lungs to swell, which can produce seizure, coma
and death in a person who is severely hyponatremic.
Instead such a person should receive
an IV with a concentrated sodium solution, a diuretic medication
to speed water loss, and an anti-convulsive medication, in case
of seizure, according to Cianca.
In more moderate cases, he added,
doctors should simply restrict fluids and encourage salt consumption
and wait for the person to "pee off" the extra fluid.
HOUSTON MARATHON STUDIES
In an effort to protect marathon
runners, Cianca and his colleagues have been studying the condition
in Houston since 1999. Over that time period, they recruited a
total of 110 volunteers.
They tested the runners' blood,
measured their fluid consumption, weighed them, and asked them
to fill out questionnaires. Then they developed a model to estimate
the amount of fluid and sodium they lost, and to approximate their
total body sodium.
They found that runners with lowered
blood sodium drank more and tended to retain more fluid than their
non-hyponatremic counterparts.
That's why comparing a person's
pre-weight with their weight along the course of a marathon can
help determine when it's time to stop drinking.
The hyponatremic runners in the
study also lost more total body sodium and had saltier sweat than
their peers, according to the researchers' estimates, leading
them to believe that there may be other factors that cause some
runners to retain fluid or lose more sodium.
Women lost less weight and lost
more sodium than men, which may help the researchers begin to
explore why hyponatremia afflicts women more often than men, said
Cianca.
The investigators also were able
to tease out a few symptoms that help differentiate hyponatremia
from dehydration.
While dehydrated runners tend to
have increased heart and respiratory rates and lowered blood pressure,
people with hyponatremia have normal vital signs, at least in
its initial stages. They are also more likely to vomit and become
puffy, but otherwise feel better than people with dehydration,
he said.
HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH?
If you're a marathon runner, what
can you do to protect yourself? The standard advice is to avoid
guzzling more water than you lose in sweat. But this may be easier
said than done.
Not only is it hard for an individual
to measure these factors, some people can become hyponatremic
without drinking excessively. Dr. Randy Eichner of the University
of Oklahoma Medical Center said he has seen this happen in dehydrated
athletes who exercise for more than five hours.
Ironman triathletes and ultramarathon
runners are particularly at risk, because of the length of their
events. But slower, less experienced marathon runners also need
to be especially careful.
Dr. Arthur Siegel, director of
internal medicine at McLean Hospital, a Harvard-affiliated psychiatric
hospital, offered a theory to explain this phenomenon.
Siegel, who has been testing blood
samples from American Medical Athletic Association runners for
more than two decades, analyzed the blood from the 28-year-old
and another young woman, who died after dropping out of the Marine
Corps Marathon. Both died of brain swelling from water intoxication.
He found that they died, not just
from drinking too much water, but because their kidneys stopped
excreting water as a response to skeletal muscle injury.
When runners "hit the wall" they
force their muscles to continue to exercise even after they've
run out of glycogen, or fuel, he told Reuters Health in an interview.
This triggers a stress hormone in the brain to tell the kidneys
to halt water excretion, in an effort to maximize blood volume.
When this happens, even a relatively
small amount of fluid can cause the brain to swell. If a person
continues to consume fluids, the body reacts to the inflammation
by continuing to protect blood volume, making the brain swell
even more.
For this reason, Siegel believes
a runner cannot become hyponatremic by over-drinking before a
race. It's when they drink excessively during and after the race
-- once the muscle injury has begun -- that they get into trouble.
WHAT TO DO?
So, how is a marathon runner supposed
to strike the perfect balance between drinking too much and too
little?
If you run for more than five hours,
weighing yourself periodically is a good idea. If you gain weight,
stop drinking.
In addition, know how you sweat.
Are your clothes soaked one mile into the race? Is your skin caked
with white grit at the finish line? So-called "salty sweaters"
are particularly at risk for over-drinking.
Watch out for feelings of confusion,
nausea, fatigue, and particularly vomiting and swollen hands and
feet. If you experience these, seek medical help.
Whether salty snacks and sports
drinks help remains a subject for debate.
In 2002 Cianca and his colleagues
gave 17 runners a sodium-supplemented drink, in addition to what
they would normally drink. They also recruited a "control" group
of 14 people who drank just the usual sports drinks. They found
no significant difference between the two groups' blood sodium
concentration, weight gain or loss or amount of fluid.
Siegel sounded a cautionary note.
Hyponatremia is caused by water retention, not just sodium loss,
he told Reuters Health. Therefore, it is dangerous for runners
to assume that as long as they drink sports drinks instead of
water they will be safe.
The bottom line is to become "more
sophisticated" urged Cianca.
"The process starts six to eight
months before the race. Too many people think they can participate
in a marathon because someone said they could." But you have to
know how your body will respond in a variety of conditions. "It's
not something you should take lightly."
Reference
Source 89
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