.....
Last year, a female runner in the Boston marathon dropped dead in mid-race.
The cause? Not a coronary. Not heatstroke. Not a beating from Tonya Harding's kinfolk (hey - you never know nowadays, right?). Rather, she died of hyponatremic encephalopathy - extreme water intoxication. This was an extreme case of what is popularly known as "heat exhaustion."
What that means is that during the course of the race, she drank so much liquid (in this case, a popular "sports drink") that the amount of salt in her blood was diluted away to dangerous levels, causing her brain to swell up, which killed her.
What's my point in telling you this? That drowning isn't the only way that too much water can kill you. Now, I'm not under the impression that a number of members at Meso are runners - or that many of us even exercise to the point where this could conceivably happen to us. But this incident does serve to expose some of the mainstream's 1 or 2 gallons a day "water madness" for what it is... possibly dangerous.
Just food for thought!
Cheers,
D
Last year, a female runner in the Boston marathon dropped dead in mid-race.
The cause? Not a coronary. Not heatstroke. Not a beating from Tonya Harding's kinfolk (hey - you never know nowadays, right?). Rather, she died of hyponatremic encephalopathy - extreme water intoxication. This was an extreme case of what is popularly known as "heat exhaustion."
What that means is that during the course of the race, she drank so much liquid (in this case, a popular "sports drink") that the amount of salt in her blood was diluted away to dangerous levels, causing her brain to swell up, which killed her.
What's my point in telling you this? That drowning isn't the only way that too much water can kill you. Now, I'm not under the impression that a number of members at Meso are runners - or that many of us even exercise to the point where this could conceivably happen to us. But this incident does serve to expose some of the mainstream's 1 or 2 gallons a day "water madness" for what it is... possibly dangerous.
Just food for thought!
Cheers,
D
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