Health Byte
Why dehydration is bad for your heart
What does drinking enough water have to do with your heart?
A lot, it turns out.
In fact, a new study says that even being mildly dehydrated as a
healthy young man plays a role in developing heart disease.
Stavros
Kavouras, Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Exercise Science
Program at the University of Arkansas, USA, led the study. He said, "You
could be mildly dehydrated without knowing it while you have endothelial
impairment similar to smoking a cigarette.
The degree of dehydration when these changes occur is at less than
two per cent dehydration, which is around the threshold when people
start feeling thirsty."
The endothelium is the one cell-thick lining of your blood vessels
that allows them to expand and contract as needed.
Atherosclerosis happens when your blood vessels lose the ability to
expand and you get hardening of the arteries, a known contributor to
cardiovascular disease.
Imagine how much more impact a lack of hydration has as you grow
older... more inflammation and less flexible arteries can spell heart
disaster.
The question has always been, how much should you drink?
The answer is, it depends. Your body uses up and can process much
more water if you live in a warmer climate, for example.
Dr. Mark Wiley has some good advice on what causes us to lose water
and how to retain more.
A good rule of thumb is to drink to excess of thirst so that you
don't get even the mild dehydration that can harm your heart.
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