Drink water to lose water?
Addiewe
Posts: 65 Member
Is there any scientific evidence to support that?
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well I think you'll die if you don't drink it0
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Read title wrong.0
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When you drink water you are letting your body know that it doesn't need to retain the fluid it's holding on to, so yes you can lose water weight by drinking more water.0
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FatFreeFrolicking wrote: »Weight loss comes from a calorie deficit. Not from drinking water. However, water is essential for proper body/organ function.
OP isn't asking about fat loss.
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Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
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you will already have lost water weight during the first week of dieting if you are on a steady deficit
why would you care about water weight in terms of weight loss anyway0 -
Lots of myths on this topic. The way I see it, it's very simple: We need a certain amount of water/fluid every day. Food contains water. When dieting and eating less food than we need to maintain weight, we need to replace that water by drinking more.
I think I didn't notice what you were asking Why should we worry about water weight?0 -
Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
Seriously? Let's try this again ...
Why can't you google this and search for a study? Lol if you have the time to ask it on the MFP forums; you can search for it on google.-7 -
IsaackGMOON wrote: »Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
Seriously? Let's try this again ...
Why can't you google this and search for a study? Lol if you have the time to ask it on the MFP forums; you can search for it on google.
Wth is wrong with you? Forgot your manners? oops...
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Because Google doesn't curate.
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snort0
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IsaackGMOON wrote: »Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
Seriously? Let's try this again ...
Why can't you google this and search for a study? Lol if you have the time to ask it on the MFP forums; you can search for it on google.
Wth is wrong with you? Forgot your manners? oops...
I just don't see why you can't google this if you have time to ask on the MFP forums. That is all.0 -
Well if you eat salt you retain water, and to lose this weight you have to flush it out with more water. Thus drinking water can help you lose weight on the short run if you also minimize your salt intake, which can be useful if you are doing competitions in a certain weight class, or when you ate too much salt on one particular day and you want to get rid of it, but this is not a strategy that I recommend on the long run.0
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IsaackGMOON wrote: »IsaackGMOON wrote: »Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
Seriously? Let's try this again ...
Why can't you google this and search for a study? Lol if you have the time to ask it on the MFP forums; you can search for it on google.
Wth is wrong with you? Forgot your manners? oops...
I just don't see why you can't google this if you have time to ask on the MFP forums. That is all.
Why don't you go from thread to thread on here and say this to everyone that asks a question that can be found via Google? Seems you may appreciate it as a good use of your time...
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Well if you eat salt you retain water, and to lose this weight you have to flush it out with more water. Thus drinking water can help you lose weight on the short run if you also minimize your salt intake, which can be useful if you are doing competitions in a certain weight class, or when you ate too much salt on one particular day and you want to get rid of it, but this is not a strategy that I recommend on the long run.
Thanks
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IsaackGMOON wrote: »IsaackGMOON wrote: »Seriously? Let's try this again ... There is a claim that if you drink EXTRA water, will help you to lose EXCESS water that your body has stored. Does anyone know if this has been scientifically proven?
Seriously? Let's try this again ...
Why can't you google this and search for a study? Lol if you have the time to ask it on the MFP forums; you can search for it on google.
Wth is wrong with you? Forgot your manners? oops...
I just don't see why you can't google this if you have time to ask on the MFP forums. That is all.
Why don't you go from thread to thread on here and say this to everyone that asks a question that can be found via Google? Seems you may appreciate it as a good use of your time...
I think I might just do that.
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Some people care about water weight because they retain more than the average person, and it makes their body uncomfortable. OP, I don't understand the whole drink more to lose water thing, either. I do know limiting sodium and increasing potassium ought to help.0
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ogmomma2012 wrote: »When you drink water you are letting your body know that it doesn't need to retain the fluid it's holding on to, so yes you can lose water weight by drinking more water.
Thanks. .I didn't know that0 -
If you drink cold water, the temperature drop could use extra calories. Not a lot though.0
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Da hell? Drink water to stay alive is about where it's at.0
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Drinking water flushes salt from your body and since water follows salt, drinking water can lead to the loss of water. Of course that assumes you aren't drinking water with sodium added.0
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The short answer is no. The studies on water, hydration and health show it is extremely difficult to measure water intake exactly, because many foods are prepared with water and have naturally occurring water. I think a reputable scientific study would be problematic and this is why this has not been done. That said, water is a marvelous diluting agent and is essential for life. A healthy body will regulate water through thirst and excretion. Drinking a little extra will not hurt you, unless taken to extremes.0
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daniwilford wrote: »The short answer is no. The studies on water, hydration and health show it is extremely difficult to measure water intake exactly, because many foods are prepared with water and have naturally occurring water. I think a reputable scientific study would be problematic and this is why this has not been done. That said, water is a marvelous diluting agent and is essential for life. A healthy body will regulate water through thirst and excretion. Drinking a little extra will not hurt you, unless taken to extremes.
Can someone translate this for me?
I thought what Fish said made most sense and in a context where it might be appropriate and waht the OP was asking about0 -
daniwilford wrote: »The short answer is no. The studies on water, hydration and health show it is extremely difficult to measure water intake exactly, because many foods are prepared with water and have naturally occurring water. I think a reputable scientific study would be problematic and this is why this has not been done. That said, water is a marvelous diluting agent and is essential for life. A healthy body will regulate water through thirst and excretion. Drinking a little extra will not hurt you, unless taken to extremes.
Can someone translate this for me?
I thought what Fish said made most sense and in a context where it might be appropriate and waht the OP was asking aboutIs there any scientific evidence to support that?
The short answer is no.0 -
Our bodies like to "camel" water. They freak out thinking this may be the only water available. But the more water you drink, the more our bodies trust us and recognize there isnt a need to hold on to it.0
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dem sodiumz0
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Well if you eat salt you retain water, and to lose this weight you have to flush it out with more water. Thus drinking water can help you lose weight on the short run if you also minimize your salt intake, which can be useful if you are doing competitions in a certain weight class, or when you ate too much salt on one particular day and you want to get rid of it, but this is not a strategy that I recommend on the long run.
This. I would also add that eating potassium helps, too.0
This discussion has been closed.
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