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woman drinking water from a water bottle to get more electrolytes in the heat when it's hot out
(Photo: The Good Brigade/Getty)

Should I Be Drinking More Electrolytes in This Heat?

As summer temperatures skyrocket, we're all sweating more during our workouts. Here's how to know if you need more than just water to replenish.

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(Photo: The Good Brigade/Getty)

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As I jogged up an arroyo at high noon on a local trail near my home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, I felt the sun beating down on my head and shoulders. I glanced at my phone鈥檚 weather app, which informed me that it was 78 degrees Fahrenheit, but the 鈥渞eal feel鈥 was 87 degrees. My shirt was drenched in sweat, and my fingers had started to swell. I reached for the last sip of water from my running vest as I hit mile three.

In my late twenties and early thirties, I听ran ultramarathons, and sports drinks filled with electrolytes were part of my training kit. Powders to dump into my water sat alongside my collection of GUs and energy bars. However, I haven鈥檛 run an ultra in years, and my electrolyte stash has dwindled in tandem with my average weekly mileage. These days, when I head out for a run, I grab my phone, a hat, and a water bottle, depending on how long I plan to be out.

I squeezed the last drops from my water bottle and checked the map鈥攋ust one mile to go. As my shoes pounded the sandy trail, I began to wonder if I was hydrated enough for my quick lunch run. I鈥檇 definitely underestimated how hot 78 degrees would feel. Should I be supplementing my water with electrolytes while exercising in the Southwest鈥檚 summer heat?

The answer, it turns out, is slightly complicated.

Do I Need More Electrolytes When I Exercise in Hot Temperatures?

Electrolytes are essential minerals, like sodium, potassium, and magnesium, that give off an electrical charge. They鈥檙e key for helping cells in your nervous system, heart, and muscles function normally, and they play a role in regulating the amount of fluids in your body.

But not everyone needs extra electrolytes just because of high temperatures, says Hayden Hess, anassistant professor at the University of Buffalo鈥檚 Center for Research and Education in Special Environments.

Whether you need additional electrolytes depends on how much you鈥檙e sweating and the sodium concentration in your sweat. The short answer, says Hess, is that the intensity of your sport, activity, or workout鈥攁nd your environment鈥攁re the two most important factors in determining whether you need to down extra electrolytes. 鈥淗igher intensity physical exercise and a hotter or humid environment will require more fluid and potentially electrolyte replacement,鈥 he says.

Can I Get Enough Electrolytes from Natural Foods, or Should I Use Drinks or Supplements?

The average electrolyte replacement supplement ranges from 150 to 1,000 milligrams of sodium, which, Hess says, is usually sufficient when paired with 16 ounces of water. But still, he points out, the average person probably doesn鈥檛 need it. 鈥淢ost people in the U.S. exceed the sodium recommendations of 3,500 milligrams per day,鈥 he says.

Whether you need additional electrolytes depends on how much you鈥檙e sweating and the sodium concentration in your sweat.

Our tendency to consume too much sodium is primarily due to the high salt content of . Because most people are already getting enough salt, and sometimes too much, there鈥檚 usually no need to add more through special drinks and supplements. The exceptions, says Hess, are when someone is working out for a long time鈥攖hink longer than two hours鈥攁nd doing so in an especially hot or humid place. Or they might be what Hess calls a salty sweater鈥攕omeone with a high concentration of sodium in their sweat. (You might qualify as a salty sweater if your sweat burns your eyes or tastes very salty, or if you have salt on your skin and clothes after your sweat dries.)

For either of these exceptions, working a regular electrolyte drink or supplement into your exercise hydration probably makes sense. Suppose you鈥檙e looking for more precise information about your own sweat and electrolyte loss during workouts. In that case,听Hess suggests using an听 that provides runners and cyclists with听an estimate of their sweat rate and sweat volume.

When I plugged in the data for my recent four-mile desert trail run, the calculator听told me that I was most likely dehydrated if no fluid was consumed during my workout. But听because I was running for less than two hours, I knew it was OK that I鈥檇 left my听Propel powder at home.

a woman laughing at an aid station at a running race
The author at a 2018 ultra in Wyoming听(Photo: Abigail Wise)

Abigail Wise used to run ultras, but now aims most of her mileage at exercising her four good dogs or pushing a stroller on shorter trails near her home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.听

Lead Photo: The Good Brigade/Getty

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