by Onestepmore » Fri 21 Sep, 2012 9:41 pm
When I used to help out with Endurance Riding horses the best way to assess hydration was weighing them as they came in after each leg, and after rehydration with electrolytes in water. The horses were always given free choice - plain, and electrolytes. As has been mentioned above, and studies have shown, that people will nearly always drink the right amount if they stop when they don't feel they are thirsty any more. Professor Ruben Rose - an eminent equine exercise physiologist always used to say 'the kidney is smarter than we are'
i spent a summer working as a Jillaroo in southern Qld. We were always told to have little packets of salt, and to dip our fingers in this at smoko time as well as not drink too much when we reached a water point when out mustering. Crude, but a way to ensure adeqate salts way before there were sports drinks etc. A friend of a friend of mine had a child die due to overhydation whilst on a drip treating coronavirus diarrhoea (quite common in children). Overhydration caused hyponatraemia, osmosis causes fluids shifts to occur - cerebral oedema, which causes the cerebrum (hindbrain) to herniate through the tentorium cerebelli or the foramen magnum (holes at the back and the base of the skull). Instadeath.
We can learn a lot from crayons. They come in different shapes and colours, but they all have to live in the same box