Tips to stop retaining water?
daisyfields79
Posts: 69 Member
Any tips to stop retaining water? I heard to drink more water but it's not working lol
1
Replies
-
Drinking water will help. Otherwise you have to give it time, especially if the water weight is from hormones or new exercise.6
-
- Eat foods rich in potassium
- Avoid excess salt
- Exercise daily
- Don't exercise so much that your muscles get sore
6 -
Avoid high amounts of salt and cut back on carbs. Unless you have a medical condition, water "weight" should be the least of any person's concern.3
-
Avoid lots of salt, drink water, drink coffee. Your water weight will fluctuate throughout the day, every day, between 5-10 lbs. It's not a big deal and will always be present in some amount. Don't stop drinking water, that will make you retain more fluid and it's really dangerous.4
-
joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
You didn't quote, and I see that she edited. Have we missed something?4 -
Athena98501 wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
You didn't quote, and I see that she edited. Have we missed something?
Not that I saw. I'm confused by that bulimia comment, too.2 -
joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
May I ask what about OP's post may point towards bulimia?2 -
My original post was about a friend but then I remembered she has this app so was worried she would see it so changed it my my water weight help. It doesn't give me the option to delete the post.2
-
Water weight is part of life. Eat more carbs than normal? Water weight. Eat more sodium than normal? Water weight. Exercise harder than normal? Water weight. Hormones cycling? Water weight.
You can drink some water to flush out the extra fluid and be patient, but honestly, the best thing I've found for dealing with water weight is understanding that it just happens and it will pass.3 -
daisyfields79 wrote: »My original post was about a friend but then I remembered she has this app so was worried she would see it so changed it my my water weight help. It doesn't give me the option to delete the post.
You can report the post, and choose 'it's my post, and I want to delete it.'4 -
If you're worried about bloating then probiotics (fermented foods) is great for that..2
-
daisyfields79 wrote: »My original post was about a friend but then I remembered she has this app so was worried she would see it so changed it my my water weight help. It doesn't give me the option to delete the post.
I saw that earlier about your friend.. you can ask the mods to delete this thread by flagging your own post.
Choose 'this is my post and I want to delete it"
1 -
If you're worried about bloating then probiotics (fermented foods) is great for that..
Does that help with water retention? People mean different things when they talk about bloating. If fermented foods only affect gassiness amd constipation, that probably won't help the OP.
@daisyfields79 Water weight comes in and out like the tide (*rimshot*). Why are you, or your friend, trying to avoid it? Excessive water retention that causes bloating and swelling should have you calling a doctor to seek out a cause and treatment, if necessary. It could be nothing (some women bloat more during their cycle, for example), or it could be something serious (kidney disease).1 -
I did some Googling today regarding Sucralose and water retention and although I couldn't find a study, there seemed to be a lot of people who felt Sucralose caused their water weight gain and a few sites backed that up. I was curious because I started gaining weight (instead of losing as I was) just a few days after I started drinking sparkling waters with Sucralose in them (which I accidentally bought thinking they were plain). I haven't drank any in two days now and am already back down almost 6 lbs., so I think I'll go back to plain sparkling water/water and forget the artificial stuff. I never really liked artificial sugars anyway.1
-
You can minimize water retention but can't really stop it ever happening. Some water fluctuation is normal body functioning.1
-
It's best to post about yourself not other people.2
-
The human body is comprised of 50-65% water...always in flux...retention/release. This shouldn't really be something to worry about unless it's excessive (like super swollen) in which case you need to see a doctor.1
-
daisyfields79 wrote: »My original post was about a friend but then I remembered she has this app so was worried she would see it so changed it my my water weight help. It doesn't give me the option to delete the post.
I hope your friend isn't the person a week or two back who kept doing stupid things I won't mention to eliminate any form of water "retention".
That was disturbing.
Water is needed by the body for muscle repair and daily functions.
This is a different matter to the oedema which can be caused by liver, heart, or kidney disease, which are serious medical issues.0 -
joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?5 -
karintalley wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?
@karintalley the post was edited so we have no idea what she described. I'm guessing it was Bulimia symptoms0 -
karintalley wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?
Excuse me, but do you always comment without reading past the first reply?0 -
karintalley wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?
Excuse me, but do you always comment without reading past the first reply?
The first reply of what? The poster I quoted?0 -
singingflutelady wrote: »karintalley wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?
@karintalley the post was edited so we have no idea what she described. I'm guessing it was Bulimia symptoms
Thank you!0 -
karintalley wrote: »karintalley wrote: »joseccastaneda wrote: »Full on sounds like bulimia. Professional help is needed for that.
Excuse me Doctor but do you always diagnose your patients with limited information?
Excuse me, but do you always comment without reading past the first reply?
The first reply of what? The poster I quoted?
The first reply of the thread. It looks like you just read that, then posted.
It's all good, you've acknowledged the correction of your mistake. Cheers.0 -
Watch you sodium intake, processed foods have a lot of it, cut it out and fast food and junk food.
Eat lean meats and fresh fruit/veg and yogurts (greek) and cottage cheese
weigh everything out on a scale and prep your meals
drink half your body weight in oz everyday and about 1g of protein for every lb you weigh
Low carb, high good fats and high protein
you got this!
takes 3500 burned cals to lose 1lb of fat
You gotta do cardio and weights
more muscle = more calories burnt at rest5 -
more muscle = more calories burnt at rest
Actually, not really.
http://www.bodyforwife.com/lifting-weights-is-better-for-fat-loss-but-not-for-the-reason-you-think/
"The reality is that muscle only burns about 6 calories per pound per day while at rest, and if you’re dropping a lot of fat, you also need to account that a pound of fat burns about 2 calories per pound/day at rest."
Muscle is really hard to add. Lifting weights for years isn't even going to do much to your BMR.1 -
Water retention to a certain degree is essential for cellular function. Excess water retention can be due to sodium or salt levels causing excess reabsorption, any potential medication you might be on i.e antidiuretics but seek professional opinion for that.
If your goal is to lose weight understand the water retained fluctuates pending time of day, diet, lifestyle, body composition so unless water retention is specifically causing you issues as diagnosed by a health professional I wouldn't focus on it too much. It is healthier and more rewarding to focus on your diet and training and with that the results come naturally.
Hope this helps and best of luck!0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions