Unlabelled: Clinical medicine defines dehydration using blood markers that confirm hypertonicity (serum sodium concentration ([Na])>145 mmol/L) and intracellular dehydration. Sports medicine equates dehydration with a concentrated urine as defined by any urine osmolality (UOsm) ≥700 mOsmol/kgHO or urine specific gravity (USG) ≥1.020.
Objective: To compare blood versus urine indices of dehydration in a cohort of athletes undergoing routine screenings.
Methods: 318 collegiate athletes (193 female) provided blood and urine samples and asked to rate how thirsty they were on a 10-point visual analogue scale. Serum was analysed for [Na], while serum and UOsm were measured using an osmometer. USG was measured using a Chemstrip. Data were categorised into dehydrated versus hydrated groupings based on these UOsm and USG thresholds.
Results: Using UOsm ≥700 mOsmol/kgHO to define dehydration, 55% of athletes were classified as dehydrated. Using any USG ≥1.020 to define dehydration, 27% of these same athletes were classified as dehydrated. No athlete met the clinical definition for dehydration (hypertonicity; serum [Na]>145 mmol/L). Normonatremia (serum [Na] between 135 mmol/L and 145 mmol/L) was maintained in 99.7% of athletes despite wide variation in UOsm (110-1298 mOsmol/kgHO). A significant correlation was confirmed between serum [Na] versus UOsm (r=0.18; P<0.01), although urine concentration extremes did not reflect derangement in serum markers or thirst rating.
Conclusion: Urine concentration thresholds classified 27%-55% of collegiate athletes as dehydrated, while no athlete was dehydrated according to blood [Na] measurement. Practitioners should caution against using urine indices to diagnose or monitor dehydration, because urinary output is a response rather than a reflection of (tightly regulated) blood tonicity.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5812394 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2017-000297 | DOI Listing |
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