What is the significance of drinking 8 - 8 fluid oz of water

garyolson43
garyolson43 Posts: 28 Member
edited October 4 in Health and Weight Loss
Does anyone know the reason why you need to drink so much water?

Replies

  • caripta85
    caripta85 Posts: 102 Member
    Because our bodies (and brain) are made up largely by water (not sure the exact percentage) When you are well hydrated, your body/mind are working properly :) even though i know this, it is still difficult to drink that much water! Im lucky if i drink HALF that!
  • PB67
    PB67 Posts: 376
    You don't.

    It's an oft-repeated myth.
  • killagb
    killagb Posts: 3,280 Member
    Drink mostly until your pee is light colored...that's the best rule of thumb.

    eta: It's certainly not important to weight loss, I'm talking from the standpoint of being hydrated.
  • itontae
    itontae Posts: 138 Member
    PB67, you beat me to it!
    Yes, it's a myth.

    same with "to flush out toxins"

    Utter rubbish
  • LolaVaantz
    LolaVaantz Posts: 74 Member
    You will feel fuller if your stomach is full of fluids...

    OR it is all a big scam thought of by the toilet paper company to ensure frequent trips to the bathroom thus increasing their profits....
  • killagb
    killagb Posts: 3,280 Member
    You will feel fuller if your stomach is full of fluids...

    OR it is all a big scam thought of by the toilet paper company to ensure frequent trips to the bathroom thus increasing their profits....
    They aren't making much off me.
  • inskydiamonds
    inskydiamonds Posts: 2,519 Member
    I have noticed significant weight loss on weeks when I actually made sure to drink the water. Basically, if you've eaten a lot of sodium it helps flush that out so you're not holding onto water weight.

    To the people who are saying this is a myth, prove it? Where are you getting this from?
  • Thirst is often mistaken for hunger, which prompts us to eat when we should be drinking. By the time we feel thirsty, we are already dehydrated. Being fully hydrated maximizes the amount of energy you have when you work out. (Try it both ways and decide for yourself. You don't have to just take the word of random insomniac MFPers.) :drinker:
  • brooksaceb
    brooksaceb Posts: 115 Member
    i was always told you only need that much if you exercise that much. Water re-hydrates the body so it can function properly. My dad drinks about a gallon and a half every day
  • PB67
    PB67 Posts: 376

    To the people who are saying this is a myth, prove it? Where are you getting this from?

    http://lmgtfy.com/?q=8+glasses+myth
  • inskydiamonds
    inskydiamonds Posts: 2,519 Member

    To the people who are saying this is a myth, prove it? Where are you getting this from?

    http://lmgtfy.com/?q=8+glasses+myth

    What a wonderful source.
    You can google the opposite and get results about the benefits of drinking water towards weight loss.

    So you can allege things without backing them up and then suggest I do the research, that's super helpful.
    I was asking if there was a legitimate source out there. Not just the vastness of the internet.
  • As I understand it, that is about the optimal amount of water you need for functioning. However, most people get almost all of that from food, which of course contains water as well - particularly fruit and veg, which in many cases are very little else. So you don't need to drink all that as well as eating it. The body has sophisticated systems for making the best use of whatever quantity of water you have, and regulating how much is kept in the body, so if you drink whenever you feel like it, you should be fine without forcing gallons of water down.
  • inskydiamonds
    inskydiamonds Posts: 2,519 Member
    Also - I would hardly consider snopes.com to be a persuasive source to go by.
  • killagb
    killagb Posts: 3,280 Member
    Also - I would hardly consider snopes.com to be a persuasive source to go by.
    Here's information from the Mayo Clinic:
    http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/water/NU00283
  • itontae
    itontae Posts: 138 Member
    Just think about it. It makes no intuitive sense whatsoever that the body would require you to chug down several large glasses a day over and above your requirements. it's a man made myth, an a recent one at that. It just makes you pee more.

    THe body is a finely tuned machine, and has its own mechanism to ensure you drink enough. It's called thirst.

    Bottled water(in areas where the stuff in the taps is good) is the biggest marketing con I can think of.

    The reason drinking more than you need to might help you when you are trying to lose weight is as others have stated. It helps fill you up and if you can neck a big glass or water at, say, noon, it might will be easier to hold off from scarfing your lunch for another half hour or so.

    Its the only thing you can shove in your stomach , in large quantities, that has no calories :smile:
  • PB67
    PB67 Posts: 376
    "People should drink at least eight glasses of water a day

    The advice to drink at least eight glasses of water a day can be found throughout the popular press.w1-w4 One origin may be a 1945 recommendation that stated: A suitable allowance of water for adults is 2.5 litres daily in most instances. An ordinary standard for diverse persons is 1 millilitre for each calorie of food. Most of this quantity is contained in prepared foods.w5 If the last, crucial sentence is ignored, the statement could be interpreted as instruction to drink eight glasses of water a day.w6

    Another endorsement may have come from a prominent nutritionist, Frederick Stare, who once recommended, without references, the consumption “around 6 to 8 glasses per 24 hours,” which could be “in the form of coffee, tea, milk, soft drinks, beer, etc.”w7 The complete lack of evidence supporting the recommendation to drink six to eight glasses of water a day is exhaustively catalogued in an invited review by Heinz Valtin in the American Journal of Physiology.w8 Furthermore, existing studies suggest that adequate fluid intake is usually met through typical daily consumption of juice, milk, and even caffeinated drinks.w9 In contrast, drinking excess amounts of water can be dangerous, resulting in water intoxication, hyponatraemia, and even death."

    http://www.bmj.com/content/335/7633/1288.full


    How-to books, beauty journals, the Internet, and the media usually recommend drinking six to eight glasses of water each day for keeping the skin hydrated, helping it look healthier, and making it less prone to wrinkles. We have found no scientific proof for this recommendation; nor is there proof, we must admit, that drinking less water does absolutely no harm. The only certainty about this issue is that, at the end of the day, we still await scientific evidence to validate what we know instinctively to be true—namely, that it is all a myth.

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0738081X10000465


    Despite the seemingly ubiquitous admonition to “drink at least eight 8-oz glasses of water a day” (with an accompanying reminder that beverages containing caffeine and alcohol do not count), rigorous proof for this counsel appears to be lacking. This review sought to find the origin of this advice (called “8 × 8” for short) and to examine the scientific evidence, if any, that might support it. The search included not only electronic modes but also a cursory examination of the older literature that is not covered in electronic databases and, most importantly and fruitfully, extensive consultation with several nutritionists who specialize in the field of thirst and drinking fluids. No scientific studies were found in support of 8 × 8.

    http://ajpregu.physiology.org/content/283/5/R993.short
  • inskydiamonds
    inskydiamonds Posts: 2,519 Member
    Oh - I was thinking people were suggesting water generally had no useful benefit to health or weight loss, as opposed to the 8 glass rule being an arbitrary rule. I did know that information. Thank you for clarifying with that link.
  • ianblackburn
    ianblackburn Posts: 26 Member
    I was recently at the Porsche Driver experience centre in Silverstone, uk. They have a driver performance centre where we had a talk on fitness and the use of the equipment they have there. Ths is used by Formula 1 drivers such as Mark Webber.

    One of the points they made was about the importance of hydration for fitness and staying alert. They said that by the time you feel thirsty you are already 3% dehydrated!

    So I think that plenty of water (or other liquid - though water is probably the healthiest) is certainly an important consideration, and I notice that my diet is much easier to control if I drink 8 glasses or more. It's really not that hard over the day. I just have a water bottle I keep topping up (I find nice cold water from a water machine much more palatable though)
  • lovelee79
    lovelee79 Posts: 362
    Water is very important, (Its the only thing that if not consumed you'd die)

    Water "feeds" every cell of your body because we are made up of water. I have been told that you need a cup of water for each of your organs.
    Brain
    eyes
    heart
    liver
    kidneys
    stomach
    intestine
    lungs
    bowel

    I:heart: water
  • itontae
    itontae Posts: 138 Member
    A good summary here
    http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/drinking-eight-glasses-of-water-a-day-is-healthy-right-wrong-803993.html

    Of course our body needs water.
    It's the arbitrary forcing down of 8 + glasses a day ( in addition to all other liquids consumed ) that is a big old pile of crapola :happy:
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