Your body may become dehydrated for any of a number of reasons; the main ones are severe diarrhea, sweating a lot in hot weather or during strenuous activity such as a marathon race, and water evaporating more quickly at lower air pressure, which is a factor in altitude sickness.
Dehydration is always uncomfortable and bad for your health; in extreme cases it can kill.
Recognize
[edit]Feelings of thirst are an important early sign of dehydration; others are headache, difficulty with or inability to urinate, and falling blood pressure and associated signs, particularly increased pulse rate or dizziness. Check the colour of your urine; the lower your body is on water, the darker it gets. If the urine is distinctly dark or you are not urinating at all, those are signs that you are seriously low on water; treat this as an emergency.
Increased urination is one of the body's normal responses to high altitude. If that does not happen, consider this a symptom of dehydration.
The causes of hangover are complex, but dehydration is one factor. Drinking water or soft drinks may help.
If you do show signs of dehydration — or to prevent it before signs show up — the main thing is to drink enough. You can also try to reduce whatever stress is leading to the dehydration; in hot weather, find air conditioning or at least shade; at altitude, descend or at least do not ascend further; in a marathon, quit or at least slow down.
Drink
[edit]To maintain hydration, drink enough water or oral rehydration solution. If you have any symptoms of dehydration, drink as much as you can without serious discomfort — at least a liter an hour — until they all go away. If you have no symptoms but are at risk of dehydration, drink often.
Other clear liquids, such as weak tea with some sugar, any clear juice or various "sports drinks", are also good. Both alcohol and caffeine are diuretics (drugs that increase urination), so booze, coffee and caffeine-containing soft drinks should be avoided or taken in very moderate amounts. A glass of beer or a morning cup of coffee are not a problem, but avoid overdoing it. Avoid hard liquor which may temporarily relieve thirst but also increases urination so it does more harm than good.
In some cases it may be difficult to drink enough, or to keep it down if you do. Try drinking many small sips. In extreme cases, health care personnel may give fluids intravenously.
If you are losing a great deal of water you also need to replace electrolytes.
- Hyponatraemia. This is a condition of low blood sodium, caused by losing salt by sweating and drinking lots of water without replacing the sodium. It has sometimes been fatal for long-distance runners.
- Salt tablets are sold mainly in pharmacies. They may be a good idea if you are drinking a lot of anything other than re-hydration solution. An alternative is to just have some salty snacks.
If you are undertaking an activity such as high-altitude climbing or major long-distance running, then you need to have a hydration plan that avoids the risks of both dehydration and hyponatraemia. Creating this may require some discussion with a doctor, preferably a sports medicine specialist.
- Water bottle. You could refill bottles got when buying water. Also more sturdy water bottles are widely available, marketed mainly for hikers, tour cyclists and the like. Some are insulated to keep drinks cold.
- Hydration pack (drink bag). These are water containers from where water can be sipped through a tube without using your hands. They can be put in your backpack or used as separate backpacks or waist packs, depending on model.
- Oral re-hydration solution. This is sold in many pharmacies and some expedition shops, either as a liquid or as sachets of powder to be mixed with water.
You can also make re-hydration solution yourself. The medical re-hydration recipe is:
- 1 liter of water (boiled or bottled) to:
- 8 teaspoons (40 mL or 30 g) of sugar;
- 1 teaspoon (5 mL or 8 g) of salt, which should be mostly NaCl; and
- (optionally) half a cup of orange juice or mashed banana to add flavour and help replace potassium
You might carry a measuring cup suitable for these quantities, or simply measure a teaspoon and carry that – their volumes vary widely. Alternately, just make up some 8:1 sugar/salt mix – optionally with a vitamin/mineral supplement pill crushed in – and carry that.
"Saudi champagne", a 50-50 mixture of club soda and apple juice, is quite palatable and reasonably close to the right mix for rehydration. Club soda or sparkling mineral water has dissolved salts and minerals, unlike plain or carbonated water, and the apple juice has some sugars. However, the carbonation may not sit well on an upset stomach.