scholarly journals Water Intake, Body Water Regulation and Health

Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 702
Author(s):  
Evan C. Johnson ◽  
William M. Adams

The biological feedback provided by human water intake upon our physiology is grossly under-investigated [...]

1960 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 390-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Lepkovsky ◽  
Aviva Chari-Bitron ◽  
R.L. Lyman ◽  
M.K. Dimick

Nutrients ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1896
Author(s):  
Tatsuki Kimizuka ◽  
Natsumi Seki ◽  
Genki Yamaguchi ◽  
Masahiro Akiyama ◽  
Seiichiro Higashi ◽  
...  

Infectious diarrhea is one of the most important health problems worldwide. Although nutritional status influences the clinical manifestation of various enteric pathogen infections, the effect of diet on enteric infectious diseases remains unclear. Using a fatal infectious diarrheal model, we found that an amino acid-based diet (AD) protected susceptible mice infected with the enteric pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. While the mice fed other diets, including a regular diet, were highly susceptible to C. rodentium infection, AD-fed mice had an increased survival rate. An AD did not suppress C. rodentium colonization or intestinal damage; instead, it prevented diarrhea-induced dehydration by increasing water intake. An AD altered the plasma and fecal amino acid levels and changed the gut microbiota composition. Treatment with glutamate, whose level was increased in the plasma and feces of AD-fed mice, promoted water intake and improved the survival of C. rodentium-infected mice. Thus, an AD changes the systemic amino acid balance and protects against lethal infectious diarrhea by maintaining total body water content.


1960 ◽  
Vol 199 (2) ◽  
pp. 238-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Lee ◽  
Nathan Lifson

A test has been carried out in rats of the possibility of measuring with the aid of doubly labeled water (D2O18) the following components of the material balance of an animal: output of CO2 and water; intake of oxygen, food and water. The items of information used for the measurement were a) isotopic analyses of initial and final blood samples, b) composition of the diet with respect to percentage protein, carbohydrate and fat, c) initial and final body weight, d) final percentage body water. Initial percentage body water obtained from a by the volume of dilution principle could substitute for d. CO2 and water output were estimated isotopically; O2 consumption, from the CO2 output and dietary R. Q.; food intake, from CO2 output and dietary composition; water intake, from the difference between water output and dietary metabolic water. A rough correction for storage of materials was made from the change in body weight. The average difference between observed values for each of the above components of the material balance and values calculated by the isotope procedure was less than 10%. The fact that dry air was supplied to the animal in the metabolism chamber used to obtain the observed values probably favored better agreement between calculated and observed values for water intake and output than would prevail in ordinary moist air.


Nutrients ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Isabel Laja García ◽  
Maria de Lourdes Samaniego-Vaesken ◽  
Teresa Partearroyo ◽  
Gregorio Varela-Moreiras

The achievement of adequate hydration status is essential for mental and physical performance and for health in general, especially in children and adolescents. Nevertheless, little is known about hydration status of this population, mainly due to the limited availability of research tools; thus, the objective of the current study was to adapt and validate our hydration status questionnaire in a Spanish adolescent-young population. The questionnaire was validated against important hydration markers: urine colour, urine specific gravity, haemoglobin, haematocrit and total body water and involved 128 subjects aged between 12–17 years. Water intake was also estimated through a three-day dietary record and physical activity was assessed through accelerometers. Participants completed the questionnaire twice. Water balance and water intake were correlated with urine specific gravity and with total body water content. Water intake obtained by the questionnaire was correlated with results from the three-day dietary record. The intraclass correlation coefficient indicated moderate concordance between both recordings and the Cronbach’s alpha revealed high consistency. The Bland and Altman method indicated that the limits of agreement were acceptable to reveal the reliability of the estimated measures. In conclusion, this is the first time that a questionnaire is valid and reliable to estimate hydration status of adolescent-young populations.


1984 ◽  
Vol 110 (1) ◽  
pp. 253-265
Author(s):  
STANLEY D. YOKOTA

Scorpions feed by a process involving the external grinding and digestion of prey, with the ingestion of only the soluble fraction. The water obtained from the prey represents the most important source of water intake for scorpions inhabiting arid regions, placing great importance on the animals' ability to utilize prey water effectively. The scorpion Paruroctonus mesaensis (Stahnke) was found to ingest a mean of 88% of the body water of selected prey. However, the scorpion loses 0.37 ml of its own body water per ml of prey water extracted, resulting in a net water gain of 0.51 ml water for every ml of prey water. Fluid uptake by the scorpion has been ascribed to a pharyngeal pumping mechanism. Direct measurements of the suction generated by the pharynx yielded a minimal estimate of its pumping capability of 130mmHg. The uptake and excretion of nitrogen and electrolytes by Paruroctonus mesaensis on a diet of Tenebrio molitor adults were also analysed. Almost all the potassium ingested was excreted, whereas most of the sodium and chloride were retained, possibly serving to expand haemolymph volume. Assuming a steady state for nitrogen, it was estimated that the net utilizable water obtained from prey, that is the water intake minus the excretory water necessitated by nitrogen excretion, was equivalent to about 35% of the initial prey water or 69% of the water ingested.


1971 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 291 ◽  
Author(s):  
NG Yates ◽  
WV Macfarlane ◽  
R Ellis

The growth of Hereford, Friesian x Hereford, and Friesian x Shorthorn calves was studied under grazing conditions in the south-east of South Australia during the autumn period of minimal dry pasture. Measurements of body water content, water turnover, and body weight changes of calves were undertaken during an 8-week period after calving in February 1968. From these measurements, estimates were made of liveweight gain and the yield of body solids per unit of water turnover (milk intake). The subsequent development of the calves was also measured. The average birth weights of the three groups were not significantly different. The 8-week total of water intake (milk) was 405 � 14.3 1. in Shorthorn cross calves, 279 � 18.0 1. for Hereford cross, and 263 � 14.3 1. among the Herefords. Over the first 8 weeks body weight gain (g/24 hr) was highest in the Shorthorn cross calves and their body solids gain was 63 % greater than that of the Hereford cross calves but only 29 % greater than that of the Hereford calves. Water turnover (1.124 hr) of the Shorthorn cross calves was 45 % greater than that of the Hereford cross calves and 54% greater than that of the Hereford calves over the 8-week period. There was no significant difference between the three groups in body weight or solids gain per unit of milk intake (g/l), though the average conversion of milk to solids by Herefords was greater than that of the other breeds. The Shorthorn cows weighed less than the other groups after calving and their average relative and absolute loss of weight during lactation was greatest. The offspring of the Shorthorn cows had the highest water intake expressed as a function of the body weight0.75 of the cows. The water turnover of Shorthorn calves as a function of calf weight0.82 was also greater than that of the other calves. The correlations between body weight gain (g/24 hr) and water turnover (l./24 hr) and between body solids gain (g/24 hr) and water turnover (l./24 hr) were 0.815 (P < 0.001) and 0.632 (P < 0.01) respectively. The correlation between cow body weight loss and calf body weight gain was 0.481 (P < 0.05). A group of nine Friesian x Hereford calves studied for 11 weeks after calving in April 1969 on newly grown winter rainfall pasture 50 km north of Adelaide had both average water turnover (l./24 hr) and body weight gains (g/24 hr) substantially higher than those of any group in the previous year. The efficiency of conversion estimated as body solids gain and body weight gain per unit of water intake was, however, similar to those of the Hereford calves in 1968. The differences between the years are presumed to follow from differences in the amount of pasture available in the dry season, relative to pasture after the rains had come. Average body water content (TOH space) was 801 ml/kg body weight at the beginning of the measurements and gradually fell to 713 ml/kg at 11 weeks.


1927 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-96
Author(s):  
J. BĚLEHRÁDEK ◽  
J. S. HUXLEY

(1) Injection of post-pituitary extract to larval and adult Amblystoma individuals leads to an increased water-intake, followed by a decrease in water-content the body, the decrease being greater than the preliminary increase. Repeated injections cause decreases of body-weight of over 35 per cent. (2) This effect runs parallel with the chromatophore effect. No change in oxygen consumption could be detected, even with long continued injection. (3) Both larval and metamorphosed Amblystoma lose weight (by loss of water) when narcotised in a solution of amytal 1 : 3000; the loss is greater in larval specimens; the decrease is followed, in metamorphosed animals, by a slight net increase. (4) Both the pituitary effect and the amytal effect develop considerably more quickly in larval than in metamorphosed Amblystoma. (5) The mechanism regulating the water-equilibrium of the body in Amblystoma passes, during metamorphosis, from a relatively imperfect state in the larval stage to a more efficient condition in adult individuals.


1970 ◽  
Vol 218 (5) ◽  
pp. 1333-1336 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Potkay ◽  
Daggett WM ◽  
JP Gilmore
Keyword(s):  

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