A Low-Sugar Flavored Beverage Improves Fluid Intake in Children During Exercise in the Heat
Sajjad Rezaei, Rocio I. Guerrero, Parker Kooima, Isabela E. Kavoura, Sai Tejaswari Gopalakrishnan, Clarissa E. Long, Floris C. Wardenaar, Jason C. Siegler, Colleen X. Muñoz, Stavros A. Kavouras

TL;DR
A low-sugar flavored drink helps children drink more fluids and stay better hydrated during exercise in the heat compared to water.
Contribution
Demonstrates that flavored, low-sugar beverages improve hydration in children during hot-weather exercise.
Findings
Children drank 128% more fluid with the flavored beverage than with water.
The flavored beverage improved hydration markers at multiple time points during exercise.
Urine volume was significantly higher with the flavored beverage, indicating better hydration.
Abstract
Objectives: This study examined the impact of a low-sugar flavored beverage on total fluid intake and hydration biomarkers during intermittent exercise in a hot environment among healthy children. Methods: Twenty-one children (11 girls, 8–10 y) completed a randomized, crossover study with two trials. Each trial involved three bouts of 10 min walking, 5 min rest, 10 min walking, and 35 min rest for a total of 3 h in a hot (29.9 ± 0.6 °C) and dry environment (26 ± 7% relative humidity). Walking intensity was 69 ± 7% of age-predicted maximum heart rate. Participants consumed either plain water (W) or a low-sugar flavored beverage (FB). Body weight, fluid intake, urine samples, and perceptual ratings were collected. Results: Total ad libitum fluid intake was significantly higher with the FB (946 ± 535 mL) than with W (531 ± 267 mL; p < 0.05). This difference was 128% higher for FB compared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermoregulation and physiological responses · Muscle metabolism and nutrition · Exercise and Physiological Responses
