| Literature DB >> 28316054 |
Danielle McCartney1, Ben Desbrow2, Christopher Irwin2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The deleterious effects of dehydration on athletic and cognitive performance have been well documented. As such, dehydrated individuals are advised to consume fluid in volumes equivalent to 1.25 to 1.5 L kg-1 body mass (BM) lost to restore body water content. However, individuals undertaking subsequent activity may have limited time to consume fluid. Within this context, the impact of fluid intake practices is unclear. This systematic review investigated the effect of fluid consumption following a period of dehydration on subsequent athletic and cognitive performance.Entities:
Keywords: Athletic; Cognitive; Dehydration; Fluid intake; Mood; Performance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28316054 PMCID: PMC5357466 DOI: 10.1186/s40798-017-0079-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med Open ISSN: 2198-9761
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Chart (study selection methodology). Where a study contained >1 intervention-arm that was eligible for inclusion (i.e. paired against a suitable control condition), these were treated as separate ‘studies’ termed ‘trials’
Fig. 2A schematic representation of the experimental protocol employed in studies eligible for inclusion in the present review
Characteristics of research studies evaluating athletic performance on continuous exercise tasks (studies are presented by order of effect)
| Citation | Participants | VO2 max | Dh protocol (exercise intensity); ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L kg BM lost−1) | Duration (min) | Performance indicator | Ambient temperature; RH; airflow | Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenefick et al. (2010a) [ | 8 M | 43.6 ± 4.1 | EX; 50 °C; 3-h W/R | 120 | 4.1 | NaCl | 300 | 1.05 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 10 °C | 0.05 |
| Chevront et al. (2005a) [ | 8 (6 M), physically active | 48 ± 9 | HT | 210 | 3.0 | NS | 390 | 1.00 | 30 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 2 °C; 50%; 2.2 m/s | 0.11 |
| Stewart et al. (2014) [ | 7 M, recreational cyclists | 52.7 ± 7.9 | EX (H); 37 °C; 120 min | 120 | 3.8 | Water | 120 | 1.15 | 7.2 | TT (cycle ergometer) | 18–25 °C; 20–30% | 0.12 |
| McConell et al. (1999a) [ | 8 M, well-trained cyclists/triathletes | 63.8 ± 1.2 | EX (V); 21 °C; 45 min | 0 | 1.9 | Water | 45 | 1.00 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 21 °C; 41%; airflow NS | 0.15 |
| McConell et al. (1999b) [ | 8 M, well-trained cyclists/triathletes | 63.8 ± 1.2 | EX (V); 21 °C; 45 min | 0 | 1.9 | Water | 45 | 0.50 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 21 °C; 41%; airflow NS | 0.24 |
| McConell et al. (1997a) [ | 7 M, well-trained cyclists/triathletes | 68. ± 2.5 | EX (V); 21 °C, 120 min | 0 | 3.2 | Deionized water | 120 | 0.50 | 3.5 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 21 °C, 43%; airflow NS | 0.24 |
| Kenefick et al. (2006) [ | 8 M, unacclimated | 63.7 ± 10.2 | EX (M); 36 °C; 75 min | 30 | 2.3 | NaCl + NNS | 20 | 1.00 | 55 | TTE (treadmill running) | 37 °C; 42% | 0.28* |
| Hillman et al. (2011a) [ | 7 M, unacclimated, competitive cyclists | NS | EX (V); 34 °C; 90 min | 15 | 3.0 | Water | 105 | 1.00 | 7.2 | PO (cycle ergometer) | 23 °C | 0.32 |
| Chevront et al. (2005b) [ | 8 (6 M) physically active | 48 ± 9 | HT | 210 | 2.9 | NS | 390 | 1.00 | 30 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 20 °C; 50%; 1 m/s | 0.35* |
| Paik et al. (2009) [ | 10 M, moderately active | 53.6 ± 11.4 | HT | 120 | 3.0 | Water | 120 | 1.00 | 30 | TTE (treadmill running) | NS | 0.43 |
| McConell et al. (1997b) [ | 7 M, well-trained cyclists/triathletes | 68.4 ± 2.5 | EX (V); 21 °C, 120 min | 0 | 3.2 | Deionized water | 120 | 1.00 | 4.2 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 21 °C, 43%; airflow NS | 0.58* |
| Hillman et al. (2011b) [ | 7 M, unacclimated, competitive cyclists | NS | EX (V); 34 °C; 90 min | 15 | 3.8 | Water | 105 | 1.00 | 7.2 | PO (cycle ergometer) | 34 °C | 0.60* |
| Kenefick et al. (2010c) [ | 8 M | 46.3 ± 5.2 | EX; 50 °C; 3-h W/R | 120 | 4.0 | NaCl | 300 | 1.05 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 30 °C | 0.64* |
| Castellani et al. (1997) [ | 8 M, unacclimated | 57.9 ± 4.5 | EX (M); 33 °C; 180 min | 135 | 4.1 | NaCl + NNS | 120 | 0.50 | 72 | TTE (treadmill walking) | 36 °C; 47%; 2.3 m/s | 0.68* |
| Walsh et al. (1994a) [ | 6 M, endurance cyclists/ triathletes | 61.4 ± 4.4 | EX (V); 30 °C; 60 min | 0 | 1.8 | NaCl + NNS | 50 | 0.90 | 8.2 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 30 °C; 60%; 0.8 m/s | 0.74* |
| Kenefick et al. (2010b) [ | 8 M | 45.3 ± 4.6 | EX; 50 °C; 3-h W/R | 120 | 4.2 | NaCl | 300 | 1.05 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 20 °C | 0.79 |
| Kavouras et al. (2006) [ | 8 M, acclimated, endurance cyclists | 61.4 ± 2.3 | FR + EX (M); 120 min | >12 h | 3.9 | Water + NNS | 80 | 0.75 | 23 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 37 °C; 48%; 2.54 m/s | 0.81* |
| Kenefick et al. (2010d) [ | 8 M | 43.7 ± 7.0 | EX; 50 °C; 3-h W/R | 120 | 4.1 | NaCl | 300 | 1.05 | 15 | TW (cycle ergometer) | 40 °C | 0.87* |
| Below et al. (1994) [ | 8 M, acclimated, endurance trained | 62.9 ± 2.8 | EX (V); 31 °C; 50 min | 0 | 2.0 | NaCl + NNS | 50 | 1.00 | 11 | TT (cycle ergometer) | 31 °C; 54% | 0.89* |
| Casa et al. (2000) [ | 8 M, unacclimated, endurance cyclists | 61.4 ± 2.3 | FR + EX (M); 120 min | >12 h | 3.9 | NaCl + NNS | 35 | 0.50 | 27 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 37 °C; 2.3 m/s | 1.25* |
| Melin et al. (1994) [ | 6 M, unacclimated, endurance trained | 57.5 ± 4.2 | HT | 60 | 2.6 | Water | NS | 0.50 | 97 | TTE (treadmill marching) | 35 °C; 20–30%; 0.8 m/s | 1.23* |
| Hasegawa et al. (2006) [ | 9 M, untrained | 48.5 ± 4.5 | EX (M); 32 °C; 60 min | 4 | 1.6 | Water | 65 | 1.00 | 4.4 | TTE (cycle ergometer) | 32 °C; 80% | 4.01* |
Exercise intensity is described as high (H), vigorous (V) or moderate (M), in accordance with classifications outlined by Norton et al. [86]. Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
Dh dehydration, EX exercise, FR fluid restriction, HT heat, NNS non-nutritive sweetener, NS not specified, PO power output, RH relative humidity, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task, TT time trial, TTE time to exhaustion, TW total work, W/R work rest cycle
*Significant difference between performances undertaken with and without fluid replacement (p < 0.05)
Characteristics of research studies evaluating athletic performance on intermittent exercise tasks
| Citation | Participants | VO2 max | Dh protocol (EX intensity); ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L kg BM lost−1) | Intermittent exercise task | Ambient temperature; RH; airflow | Performance outcomes(s) | Performance outcomes significantly affected (Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walsh et al. (1994b) [ | 6 M, endurance cyclists/triathletes | 61.4 ± 4.4 | EX (V); 30 °C; 60 min | 15 | 1.8 | NaCl + NNS | 65 | 0.90 | aIST | NS | Max. velocity; lower limb force | No effect |
| Maxwell et al. (1999) [ | 11 M, untrained | NS | EX (M); 32 °C; 48 min | 120 | 1.5 | NaCl + NNS | 208 | 1.55 | bMART | 32 °C; 73% | Sprint duration | ↑ (0.19) |
| Devlin et al. (2001a) [ | 7 M, sub-elite cricketers | 56 ± 6 | EX; 28 °C; 60 min | 0 | 2.8 | Water | 60 | 0.80 | cMMRT | 16 °C; 60% | 20-m shuttle runs | ↑ (0.30) |
| Cheuvont et al. (2006) [ | 8 M, physically active | 52 ± 6 | HT | Testing at 0, 30 and 60 | 2.7 | Water | 185–240 | 1.00 | 15 s WAnT | 22 °C; 65% | Abs. mean PO; Rel. mean PO; | No effect |
| Edwards et al. (2007a) [ | 11 M, moderately active soccer players | 50.9 ± 4.0 | EX; 19-25 °C; 90 min | 0 | 2.4 | Water | 90 | 0.80 | dYo-Yo Test | NS | Distance covered | ↑ (ES unknown) |
| Maxwell et al. (2009a) [ | 8 M, unacclimated, game players | 59.9 ± 8.0 | EX (H/M); 36 °C; 90 min | >12 h | 3.9 | Water | >12 h | 1.50 | eIST | 36 °C; 49% | TW; Abs. PPO; Rel. PPO | TW (0.97) and Abs. PPO (0.79) ↑ on RSB 2 only. |
| Maxwell et al. (2009b) [ | 8 M, unacclimated, game players | 59.9 ± 8.0 | EX (H/M); 36 °C; 90 min | >12 h | 3.9 | Water | >12 h | 1.00 | eIST | 36 °C; 49% | TW; Abs. PPO; Rel. PPO | No effect |
| Kraft et al. (2011) [ | 10 M | NS | WI | 45 | 3.0 | Water | 158–178 | 1.00 | fIST | NS | Abs. mean PO; Abs. PPO; | No effect |
| Owen et al. (2013a) [ | 13 M, semi-professional soccer players | 54 ± 3 | EX; 19 °C; 105 min | 5 | 2.5 | Water | 110 | 0.89 | dYo-Yo Test | 19 °C; 59% | Distance covered | No effect |
| Owen et al. (2013b) [ | 13 M, semi-professional soccer players | 54 ± 3 | EX; 19 °C; 105 min | 5 | 2.5 | Water | 110 | 0.51 | dYo-Yo Test | 19 °C; 59% | Distance covered | No effect |
Exercise intensity is described as high (H), vigorous (V) or moderate (M), in accordance with classifications outlined by Norton et al. [86]. Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
Abs. absolute, Dh dehydration, ES effect size, EX exercise, HT heat, IST intermittent sprint test, MART maximal anaerobic running test, Max. maximum, MMRT maximal multistage running test, NNS non-nutritive sweetener, NS not specified, PO power output, PPO peak power output, RH relative humidity, Rel. relative, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task, TW total work, WAnT Wingate Anaerobic Test, WI warm water immersion
aThe intermittent sprint test (IST) comprised of five 5-s sprints at 3-min intervals on a cycle ergometer
bThe maximal anaerobic running test (MART) involved repeated 20-s runs on a treadmill, at increasing intensities, with 100-s passive recovery between runs until volitional exhaustion
cThe maximal multistage running test (MMRT) involved repeated 20-m runs between two points, at increasing intensity
dThe Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test is a soccer-specific performance test that comprises of 20-m shuttle runs separated by 10 s jog recovery. Running speed during the test is incremental, and maximal performance is indicated by total distance covered
eThe IST comprised of a 36-min repeated sprint exercise divided into 2-min periods of a 4-s sprint and 100 s of active recovery (35% VO2 max) and 16 s passive rest. A repeated sprint bout (RSB) involving 5 × 2 s sprints with 18 s active recovery was also completed after the 8th and 16th sprints (RSB 1 and RSB 2). All testing was completed on a cycle ergometer
fThe IST comprised of a 3-min warm up followed by 6 × 15 s maximal sprints separated by 30 s active recovery on a cycle ergometer
Characteristics of research studies evaluating athletic performance on resistance exercise tasks
| Citation | Participants | Dh protocol; ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L kg BM lost−1) | Resistance exercise task | Performance outcomes(s) | Performance outcomes significantly affected (Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Montain et al. (1998) [ | 8 M, physically active | EX (M); 40 °C; 2–3 h | Testing from | 4.0 | Water | 3–8 h | NS | Knee extension | ET >50% MVC; MVC pre-ET test, 30-s post-ET test and >30-s post-ET test | ET >50% MVC ↑ (2.70) |
| Greiwe et al. (1998) [ | 7 M, unacclimated | HT | 120 | 3.8 | Water | 306 | 1.00 | Knee extension and elbow flexion | Peak torque; ET 100% MVC | No effect |
| Bigard et al. (2001) [ | 11 M, unacclimated, physically active | HT | 180 | 3.0 | NaCl + water | 120 | 1.00 | Knee extension | MVC, ET 25% MVC; ET 75% MVC | ET 25% MVC ↑ (0.22) |
| Schoffstall et al. (2001) [ | 10 M, competitive power lifters | HT | 120 | 1.7 | Water | 120 | 1.10 | Bench Press | 1 RM | ↑ (0.24) |
| Del Coso et al. (2008) [ | 7 (NS), acclimated, endurance cyclists | EX (V); 36 °C; 2 h | 0 | 3.7 | Mineral water | 120 | 0.90 | Knee extension | MVC | No effect |
| Kraft et al. (2010) [ | 10 M, recreationally strength trained | WI | ≥45 | 3.1 | Water | 165 | 1.00 | gFull body resistance exercise protocol | Repetitions completed at 12 RM | ↑ (0.87) |
| Ali et al. (2013) [ | 10 M, university-level soccer players | EX (V); 22 °C; 90 min | 0 | 2.9 | Water | 90 | 0.50 | MVC (3.14 and 1.05 rad/s) knee flexion and extension | Peak torque; TW; Abs. mean PO | No effect |
| Knee extension and elbow flexion | Peak torque; mean torque | No effect | ||||||||
| Wilson et al. (2014) [ | 8 M, licenced jockeys | EX; 20 °C; 45 min | 0 | 1.8 | Water | ~35 | 1.00 | Chest-press and knee flexion | Max. strength | ↑ Chest (5.57) and leg (1.05) max. strength |
| Rodrigues et al. (2014) [ | 10 M, unacclimated, physically active | EX (V); 37 °C; 91 min | 30 | 2.0 | Water | 121 | NS | Knee extension and elbow flexion | Peak torque | Knee extensor peak torque ↑ (0.85) |
Exercise intensity is described as high (H), vigorous (V) or moderate (M), in accordance with classifications outlined by Norton et al. [86]. Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
Abs. absolute, Dh dehydration, ES effect size, ET endurance time, EX exercise, HT heat, MVC maximal voluntary contraction, NS not specified, PO power output, RH relative humidity, RM repetition maximum, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task, TW total work, WI warm water immersion
gThe full body resistance exercise protocol measured total repetitions in three sets of bench press, lat pull down, overhead press, barbell curl, triceps and leg press exercise at 12 RM
Characteristics of research studies evaluating athletic performance on sport-specific exercise tasks
| Citation | Participants | VO2 max | Dh protocol; ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L∙kg BM lost−1) | Sport-specific exercise task | Performance outcomes(s) | Performance outcomes significantly affected (Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Devlin et al. (2001b) [ | 7 M, sub-elite cricketers | 56 ± 6 | EX; 28 °C; 60 min | 0 | 2.8 | Water | 60 | 0.80 | Cricket bowling | Accuracy (line and length); velocity | ↑ Bowling accuracy for line (0.85) and length (0.85) |
| Ali et al. (2011) [ | 10 (0 M), soccer players | 47 ± 4 | EX; 17 °C; 90 min | 0 | 1.4 | Water | 90 | 1.07 | hLSPT | Movement time; penalty time; performance time | No effect |
| Fritz et al. (2013) [ | 13 M, elite squash players | NS | EX | NS | 1.3 | Water | NS | 0.40 | iGhosting Test | TT | ↓ (0.55) |
| Owen et al. (2013c) [ | 13 M, semi-professional soccer players | 54 ± 3 | EX; 19 °C; 105 min | 5 | 2.5 | Water | 110 | 0.89 | hLSPT | Movement time; penalty time; performance time | No effect |
| jLSST | Time taken; shot speed; points per shot | No effect | |||||||||
| Owen et al. (2013d) [ | 13 M, semi-professional soccer players | 54 ± 3 | EX; 19 °C; 105 min | 5 | 2.5 | Water | 110 | 0.51 | hLSPT | Movement time; penalty time; performance time | No effect |
| jLSST | Time taken; shot speed; points per shot | No effect | |||||||||
| Wilson et al. (2014) [ | 8 M, licenced jockeys | NS | EX; 20 °C; 45 min | 0 | 1.8 | Water | ~35 | 1.00 | Simulated race ride | Pushing frequency | ↑ (1.46) |
| Go-No-Go task | SRT | No effect |
Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
Dh dehydration, EX exercise, LIST Loughborough Intermittent Sprinting Test, LSPT Loughborough Soccer Passing Test, LSST Loughborough Shooting Test, Max. maximum, NS not specified, RH relative humidity, SRT simple reaction time, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task, TT time trial
Characteristics of research studies evaluating athletic performance on balance exercise tasks
| Citation | Participants | Dh protocol; ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L kg BM lost−1) | Balance exercise task | Performance outcomes(s) | Performance outcomes significantly affected (Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erkmen et al. (2010) [ | 17 M, physically active | EX (V); 21–24 °C; 60 min | Testing at 0 and 20 min | 3.3 | Water | 60/80 | 1.00 | One-leg stand static balance test | Eyes close and eyes open kOSI (0 min post-Dh) | ↓ Eyes open OSI 0 min post-Dh (1.12) |
| Ely et al. (2012a) [ | 32 M, unacclimated | EX; 50 °C; 3 h work/rest | 90 | 4.1 | NaCl + water | 270 | 1.00 | 20-s dynamic balance test |
kOSI; l mean deflection; time spent stable | No effect |
Exercise intensity is described as high (H), vigorous (V) or moderate (M), in accordance with classifications outlined by Norton et al. [86]. Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
Dh dehydration, EX exercise, OSI overall stability index, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task
hDuring the Loughborough Soccer Passing Test (LSPT), participants completed a random sequence of eight short and long passes of a soccer ball towards a target, as quickly as possible with the fewest time penalties
iThe ‘Ghosting Test’ is a squash-specific movement test. Participants were instructed to collect a half-ball that was placed on three racquets positioned around the court, move to the ‘T’, and then to the next racquet at the opposite corner as quickly as possible
jDuring the In the Loughborough Shooting Test (LSST), participants were required to sprint ~12 m, then pass, control and shoot the ball at targets within the goal area
kThe overall stability index (OSI) is an indicator of a subject’s ability to balance on a platform. A higher OSI indicates poorer balance performance
lMean deflection was defined as the average position of the subject during the balance test. A higher mean deflection indicates more displacement and poorer balance performance
Characteristics of research studies evaluating cognitive performance
| Citation | Participants | Dh protocol; ambient temperature; duration | Total REC (min) | Dh trial BM loss (%) | Fluid type | Fluid assimilation time (min) | Fluid intake (L∙kg BM | Cognitive domains assessed | Ambient temperature; RH; airflow | Cognitive domains significantly affected by fluid intake (Hedges’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cian et al. (2001a) [ | 7 M, unacclimated, endurance trained | EX (V); 25 °C; 120 min | Testing at 140 and 240 min | 2.7 | CHO + electrolyte | 80/180 | 1.00 | Memory | NS | ↑ Memory 2-h post-Dh |
| Cian et al. (2001b) [ | 7 M, unacclimated, endurance trained | HT | Testing at 140 and 240 min | 2.6 | CHO + electrolyte | 80/180 | 1.00 | Memory | NS | ↑ Memory 2-h post-Dh |
| Grego et al. (2004) [ | 8 M, endurance trained cyclists | EX (V); 20–21 °C; 180 min | 5 | 4.1 | Water | 185 | 0.73 | Perceptual discrimination | NS | No effect |
| Serwah et al. (2006a) [ | 8 M | EX (V); 31 °C; 90 min | 3 | 1.7 | Water | 9 | 1.00 | Psychomotor function/processing speed | NS | No effect |
| Serwah et al. (2006b) [ | 8 M | EX (V); 31 °C; 90 min | 3 | 1.7 | Water | 90 | 0.50 | Psychomotor function/processing speed | NS | No effect |
| Edwards et al. (2007b) [ | 11 M, moderately active soccer players | EX; 19–25 °C; 90 min | 0 | 2.4 | Water | 90 | 0.80 | Visual scanning/processing speed | NS | No effect |
| Adam et al. (2008a) [ | 8 (6 M), physically active soldiers | HT | 120 | 3.0 | NS | 300 | NS | Psychomotor function/processing speed | 20 °C; 50%; 1 m/s | No effect |
| Adam et al. (2008b) [ | 8 (6 M), physically active soldiers | HT | 120 | 3.0 | NS | 300 | NS | Psychomotor function/processing speed | 2 °C; 50%; 2.2 m/s | No effect |
| D’Anci et al. (2009a) [ | 16 M, university athletes | EX; 60 min | NS | 2.0 | Water | 60 | NS | Memory | NS | ↑ Psychomotor function/processing speed |
| D’Anci et al. (2009b) [ | 13 (0 M), university athletes | EX; 60–75 min | NS | 1.7 | Water | 60-75 | NS | Memory | NS | ↑ Psychomotor function/processing speed |
| Ganio et al. (2011) [ | 24 M, physically fit | EX; 28 °C; 40 min | 20 | 1.6 | Water | 60 | NS | Psychomotor function/processing speed | 23 °C | ↑ Psychomotor function/processing speed and memory/processing speed |
| Ely et al. (2012b) [ | 32 M, unacclimated | EX; 50 °C; 3 h W/R | 90 | 4.1 | NaCl + water | 270 | 1.00 | Psychomotor function/processing speed | Testing at 10, 20, 30 and 40 °C | No effect |
| Wilson et al. (2014) [ | 8 M, licenced jockeys | EX; 20 °C; 45 min | 0 | 1.8 | Water | ~35 | 1.00 | Response inhibition | NS | No effect |
| Wittbrodt et al. (2015a) [ | 12 M, recreationally active | EX (V); 32 °C; 50 min | NS | 1.5 | Water | >50 | 1.00 | Psychomotor function/processing speed | 32 °C; 65% | No effect |
| Wittbrodt et al. (2015b) [ | 12 M, recreationally active | EX (V); 32 °C; 50 min | NS | 1.5 | Water | >50 | 0.80 | Psychomotor function/processing speed | 32 °C; 65% | No effect |
Exercise intensity is described as high (H), vigorous (V) or moderate (M), in accordance with classifications outlined by Norton et al. [86]. Values are Hedges’ g effect sizes
CHO carbohydrate, Dh dehydration, EX exercise, HT heat, NS not specified, Total REC time from completing the dehydration protocol to commencing the subsequent task, W/R work rest cycle
Fig. 3Forest plot displaying the effect of fluid intake on continuous exercise performance. Size of the squares is proportional to the weight of the study
Fig. 4Correlation between change in ambient environmental temperature and change in continuous exercise performance (Hedges’ g). Circle diameter corresponds to the weight of each study. Hedges g = −0.105 + 0.024 × temperature (°C)
Fig. 5Correlation between change in fluid intake (L kg BM lost−1) and change in continuous exercise performance (Hedges’ g) controlling for ambient environmental temperature, exercise duration, level of dehydration and the ecological validity of the exercise protocol. Circle diameter corresponds to the weight of each study. Hedges g = −0.557 + 0.002 × fluid volume (L kg BM lost−1) + 0.025 × temperature (°C) + 0.011 × exercise duration (min) + 0.218, if ecologically valid + 0.0126 × level of dehydration (% BM lost)
Summary of moderator variables for the meta-regression analysis of the effect of fluid volume on the magnitude of the weighted mean treatment effect
| Covariate | Coefficient (95% CI) |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Fluid volume | 0.002 (−0.006, 0.009) | 0.625 | 0.91 |
| Temperature | 0.025 (0.015, 0.036) | <0.001 | |
| Exercise duration | 0.011 (−0.001, 0.023) | 0.071 | |
| Ecological validity | 0.218 (−0.124, 0.561) | 0.188 | |
| Level of dehydration | 0.013 (−0.126, 0.151) | 0.845 |