Wisconsin [US]: A recent research of thousands of people finds a significant difference in the amount of water people consume around the world and throughout their lives, clearly refuting the oft-repeated concept that eight, 8-ounce glasses of water cover the human body's daily needs.
"The science has never supported the old eight glasses thing as an appropriate guideline, if only because it confused total water turnover with water from beverages and a lot of your water comes from the food you eat," says Dale Schoeller, a University of Wisconsin-Madison emeritus professor of nutritional sciences who has been studying water and metabolism for decades. "But this work is the best we've done so far to measure how much water people actually consume on a daily basis - the turnover of water into and out of the body - and the major factors that drive water turnover."
That's not to say the new results settle on a new guideline. The study, published in the journal Science, measured the water turnover of more than 5,600 people from 26 countries, ages ranging from 8 days to 96 years old, and found daily averages on a range between 1 liter per day and 6 liters per day. "There are outliers, too, that are turning over as much as 10 liters a day," says Schoeller, a co-author of the study. "The variation means pointing to one average doesn't tell you much. The database we've put together shows us the big things that correlate with differences in water turnover."
Previous studies of water turnover relied largely on volunteers to recall and self-report their water and food consumption, or were focused observations - of, say, a small group of young, male soldiers working outdoors in desert conditions - of questionable use as representative of most people. The new research objectively measured the time it took water to move through the bodies of study participants by following the turnover of "labeled water." Study subjects drank a measured amount of water containing trackable hydrogen and oxygen isotopes. Isotopes are atoms of a single element that have slightly different atomic weights, making them distinguishable from other atoms of the same element in a sample.
"If you measure the rate a person is eliminating those stable isotopes through their urine over the course of a week, the hydrogen isotope can tell you how much water they're replacing and the elimination of the oxygen isotope can tell us how many calories they are burning," says Schoeller, whose UW-Madison lab in the 1980s was the first to apply the labeled-water method to study people.
More than 90 researchers were involved in the study, which was led by a group that includes Yosuke Yamada, a former UW-Madison postdoctoral researcher in Schoeller's lab and now section head of the National Institute of Biomedical Innovation, Health and Nutrition in Japan, and John Speakman, zoology professor at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. They collected and analyzed data from participants, comparing environmental factors - such as temperature, humidity and altitude of the participants' hometowns - to measured water turnover, energy expenditure, body mass, sex, age and athlete status.
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