Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults

This study analyzed the acute effect of water consumption on resting metabolic rate (RMR). It was hypothesized that water would have a small, nonclinically significant effect on RMR. Men and women ages 18–40 years participated in a crossover study in which each participant received a No Water and Wa...

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Main Author: Murphy, Brittany Leigh
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2020
Subjects:
RMR
REE
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8405
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9405&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-94052021-09-17T05:01:01Z Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults Murphy, Brittany Leigh This study analyzed the acute effect of water consumption on resting metabolic rate (RMR). It was hypothesized that water would have a small, nonclinically significant effect on RMR. Men and women ages 18–40 years participated in a crossover study in which each participant received a No Water and Water condition (order determined randomly) with a 7-day washout period between each condition. Both conditions began with visual analog scales to gauge hunger and thirst levels, urine spectrometry to quantify hydration status, and height and weight measurements. The No Water condition consisted of a 30-minute rest period followed by 45 minutes of RMR testing. The Water condition was identical except for the administration of 500 ml of purified water at 3 °C 10 minutes prior to the beginning of the RMR measurement. Resting metabolic rate testing was done via indirect calorimetry. There was not a condition-by-time difference in 24-hour resting energy expenditure, oxygen consumption, or metabolic equivalents when including all data points and controlling for nonlinearity (ps > 0.0682). There was a significant difference in respiratory quotient (RQ) (F = 13.73; p = 0.0006) with the No Water condition showing a slightly higher RQ than the Water condition. The nonlinear pattern was primarily driven by the first several minutes of testing. Accordingly, we completed analyses without the first 5 minutes of data. The results persisted; that is, there was no condition-by-time effect in 24-hour resting energy expenditure, oxygen consumption, or metabolic equivalents (ps > 0.2435). Further, the RQ remained significantly different (F = 10.57; ps > 0.0023); however, it was slightly higher in the Water condition. This study did not support our hypothesis that consumption of 500 ml of water would have a measurable effect on RMR and fuel utilization compared to not consuming water. Rather, this study replicates other studies that suggest there is not an acute measurable effect of water consumption on RMR. Nevertheless, one positive application of these findings is that water may be a suitable control in RMR studies. In addition, these results should not discourage overall water consumption for healthy functioning. Further, consumption of water-rich foods over time could be an effective strategy for weight management (as shown in other studies). Future studies could attempt to determine if larger volumes of water or different temperatures of water have an effect on RMR. 2020-04-10T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8405 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9405&context=etd https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive resting metabolic rate RMR effect of water water metabolism resting energy expenditure REE metabolic rate fluids energy expenditure Life Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic resting metabolic rate
RMR
effect of water
water
metabolism
resting energy expenditure
REE
metabolic rate
fluids
energy expenditure
Life Sciences
spellingShingle resting metabolic rate
RMR
effect of water
water
metabolism
resting energy expenditure
REE
metabolic rate
fluids
energy expenditure
Life Sciences
Murphy, Brittany Leigh
Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
description This study analyzed the acute effect of water consumption on resting metabolic rate (RMR). It was hypothesized that water would have a small, nonclinically significant effect on RMR. Men and women ages 18–40 years participated in a crossover study in which each participant received a No Water and Water condition (order determined randomly) with a 7-day washout period between each condition. Both conditions began with visual analog scales to gauge hunger and thirst levels, urine spectrometry to quantify hydration status, and height and weight measurements. The No Water condition consisted of a 30-minute rest period followed by 45 minutes of RMR testing. The Water condition was identical except for the administration of 500 ml of purified water at 3 °C 10 minutes prior to the beginning of the RMR measurement. Resting metabolic rate testing was done via indirect calorimetry. There was not a condition-by-time difference in 24-hour resting energy expenditure, oxygen consumption, or metabolic equivalents when including all data points and controlling for nonlinearity (ps > 0.0682). There was a significant difference in respiratory quotient (RQ) (F = 13.73; p = 0.0006) with the No Water condition showing a slightly higher RQ than the Water condition. The nonlinear pattern was primarily driven by the first several minutes of testing. Accordingly, we completed analyses without the first 5 minutes of data. The results persisted; that is, there was no condition-by-time effect in 24-hour resting energy expenditure, oxygen consumption, or metabolic equivalents (ps > 0.2435). Further, the RQ remained significantly different (F = 10.57; ps > 0.0023); however, it was slightly higher in the Water condition. This study did not support our hypothesis that consumption of 500 ml of water would have a measurable effect on RMR and fuel utilization compared to not consuming water. Rather, this study replicates other studies that suggest there is not an acute measurable effect of water consumption on RMR. Nevertheless, one positive application of these findings is that water may be a suitable control in RMR studies. In addition, these results should not discourage overall water consumption for healthy functioning. Further, consumption of water-rich foods over time could be an effective strategy for weight management (as shown in other studies). Future studies could attempt to determine if larger volumes of water or different temperatures of water have an effect on RMR.
author Murphy, Brittany Leigh
author_facet Murphy, Brittany Leigh
author_sort Murphy, Brittany Leigh
title Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
title_short Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
title_full Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
title_fullStr Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Water Consumption on Resting Metabolism in Adults
title_sort effect of water consumption on resting metabolism in adults
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2020
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8405
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9405&context=etd
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