Pre-exercise hyperhydration delays dehydration and improves endurance capacity during 2 h of cycling in a temperate climate

51Citations
Citations of this article
106Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Whether the use of pre-exercise hyperhydration could improve the performance of athletes who do not hydrate sufficiently during prolonged exercise is still unknown. We therefore compared the effects of pre-exercise hyperhydration and pre-exercise euhydration on endurance capacity, peak power output and selected components of the cardiovascular and thermoregulatory systems during prolonged cycling. Using a randomized, crossover experimental design, 6 endurancetrained subjects underwent a pre-exercise hyperhydration (26 ml of water·kg body mass-1 with 1.2 g glycerol ·kg body mass-1) or pre-exercise euhydration period of 80 min, followed by 2 h of cycling at 65% maximal oxygen consumption (V̇O2max) (26-27°C) that were interspersed by 5, 2-min intervals performed at 80% V̇O2max. Following the 2 h cycling exercise, subjects underwent an incremental cycling test to exhaustion. Pre-exercise hyperhydration increased body water by 16.1±2.2 ml·kg body mass-1. During exercise, subjects received 12.5 ml of sports drink·kg body mass -1. With pre-exercise hyperhydration and pre-exercise euhydration, respectively, fluid ingestion during exercise replaced 31.0±2.9% and 37.1±6.8% of sweat losses (p>0.05). Body mass loss at the end of exercise reached 1.7±0.3% with preexercise hyperhydration and 3.3±0.4% with pre-exercise euhydration (p<0.05). During the 2 h of cycling, pre-exercise hyperhydration significantly decreased heart rate and perceived thirst, but rectal temperature, sweat rate, perceived exertion and perceived heat-stress did not differ between conditions. Pre-exercise hyperhydration significantly increased time to exhaustion and peak power output, compared with pre-exercise euhydration. We conclude that pre-exercise hyperhydration improves endurance capacity and peak power output and decreases heart rate and thirst sensation, but does not reduce rectal temperature during 2 h of moderate to intense cycling in a moderate environment when fluid consumption is 33% of sweat losses.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Goulet, E. D. B., Rousseau, S. F., Lamboley, C. R. H., Plante, G. E., & Dionne, I. J. (2008). Pre-exercise hyperhydration delays dehydration and improves endurance capacity during 2 h of cycling in a temperate climate. Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 27(5), 263–271. https://doi.org/10.2114/jpa2.27.263

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free