Dehydration and heat-related death: sweat lodge syndrome

A 37-year-old Caucasian male died of dehydration and heat exposure following a sweat lodge ceremony in outback Australia. The case demonstrates difficulties that may arise in the determination of the cause of death at autopsy due to nonspecific pathologic findings in hyperthermic deaths. There are also a number of features that characterize this particular "sweat [...]

By |2013-01-31T09:55:08+00:00enero 31st, 2013|Age and the elderly, Scientific papers|0 Comments

Impact of an early weighing policy on neonatal hypernatraemic dehydration and breast feeding

AIMS: To ascertain the effect of a policy of early weighing on the detection and severity of neonatal hypernatraemic dehydration (NHD) and on breastfeeding rates in the short and medium term. METHODS: A policy of weighing infants at 72-96 h was introduced from 1 July 2004. Two time periods were studied: pre-policy and post-policy (18 [...]

By |2013-01-31T09:55:08+00:00enero 31st, 2013|Pregnancy and infancy, Scientific papers|0 Comments

Effects of acute dehydration on brain morphology in healthy humans

Dehydration can affect brain structure which has important implications for human health. In this study, we measured regional changes in brain structure following acute dehydration. Healthy volunteers received a structural MRI scan before and after an intensive 90-min thermal-exercise dehydration protocol. We used two techniques to determine changes in brain structure: a manual point counting [...]

Brain apparent diffusion coefficient decrease during correction of severe hypernatremic dehydration

We report on the brain diffusion MR imaging findings in a neonate with severe hypernatremic dehydration, which resulted in cerebral edema (osmotic edema) and in apparent diffusion coefficient decrease, despite a careful and slow rehydration. This report provides in vivo insight into nervous cell response to osmotic challenge. PMID: 16091515 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE

Clinical assessment of dehydration in older people admitted to hospital: what are the strongest indicators?

Due to an absence of published primary data, this study explores dehydration prevalence and the change in physiological parameters frequently used to assess dehydration (fluid deficit) in older hospitalized people, as no standard measurement method exists. This observational longitudinal cohort study recruited 43 people aged 60 years or over, voluntarily admitted to a tertiary teaching [...]

By |2013-01-31T09:55:08+00:00enero 31st, 2013|Assessment methodologies, Scientific papers|0 Comments

Influence of moderate dehydration on soccer performance: physiological responses to 45 min of outdoor match-play and the immediate subsequent performance of sport-specific and mental concentration tests

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether moderate water loss (approximately 1.5-2% of body mass (BM)) represents a significant impairment to soccer match-play and the related fitness variables. METHODS: 11 moderately active male soccer players (mean (SD) age 24.4 (3) years, BM 74.03 (10.5) kg, peak oxygen consumption 50.91 (4.0) ml/kg/min) volunteered to participate. The experimental procedure comprised: [...]

By |2013-01-31T09:55:08+00:00enero 31st, 2013|Exercise and sport, Scientific papers|0 Comments

The effects of dehydration on brain volume — preliminary results.

In adults the cranium is a rigid bony vault of fixed size and therefore the intra-cranial volume is a constant which equals the sum of the volume of the brain, the intra-cranial volume of CSF and the intra-cranial volume of blood. There can be marked changes in the volumes of these three intra-cranial compartments which [...]

Return to competition following ischemic colitis caused by severe dehydration

OBJECTIVE: This article summarizes a case of ischemic colitis suffered by a triathlete during an Ironman competition. BACKGROUND: Exercise results in a significant reduction in splanchnic blood flow to help maintain cardiovascular function. When dehydration and heat stress accompany exercise, blood flow to the splanchnic vasculature is further reduced, increasing the risk of local ischemia [...]

By |2013-01-31T09:55:08+00:00enero 31st, 2013|Exercise and sport, Scientific papers|0 Comments