Glycerol hyperhydration: hormonal, renal and vascular fluid responses . Freund, Beau J., Scott J. Montain, Andrew J. Young, Michael N. Sawka, Jane P. Deluca, Kent B. Pandolf, C. Robert Valeri. U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, Massachusetts 01760-5007 and Naval Blood Research Laboratory, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02118
APStracts 2:0325A, 1995.
Glycerol ingestion has been shown to mediate hyperhydration, however, the mechanism(s) responsible for this improved fluid retention are not well understood. This study examined the hormonal, renal and vascular fluid responses to glycerol hyperhydration in 11 resting male volunteers who ingested one of two experimental solutions followed by the ingestion of a water bolus. The volume of fluid ingested was determined from the subjects' measured total body water (TBW) (total volume = 37 ml_l TBW-1, =1765 +/- 162 ml). Experimental solutions (5.0 ml_l TBW-1) were matched for color and taste and differed only in that one contained 1.5 g glycerol_l TBW-1 (total osmolar load = 777 +/- 24 mOsmols). Nine of the 11 subjects also completed a control trial during which no fluid was ingested. Glycerol ingestion (GI) resulted in greater fluid retention compared to the ingestion of water alone (WI), (60 vs 32% 3-h post hyperhydration, p&LT0.01). This improved fluid retention with GI resulted from lower urine flow rates (peak 6.2 vs 10.5 ml_min-1, p&LT0.01) associated with lower free water clearance rates (peak = 1.2 vs. 8.2 ml_min-1, p&LT0.01). Hyperhydration had no effect on plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentrations. Changes in plasma aldosterone were unrelated to differences in fluid retention. Antidiuretic hormone concentrations (ADH) were significantly reduced from pre-hyperhydration levels during both hyperhydration trials, but tended (p=0.07) to rise during GI compared to WI at the very time urine flow and free water clearance differences were also evident. This suggests ADH may, in part, be responsible for glycerol's effectiveness although, differences in ADH concentrations were small and near the assay's sensitivity limits. Alternatively, glycerol's effectiveness may result from it directly increasing the kidneys' medullary concentration gradient and hence, water reabsorption.

Received 29 November 1994; accepted in final form 30 June 1995.
APS Manuscript Number A1210-4.
Article publication pending Journal of Applied Physiology.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 30 July 1995.