As the temperature heats up, a familiar element of summer training is returning: sweat. In this blog post, we examine the science behind sweat rates in athletes, as well as the implications to your nutrition routine. Sweat is a well-known part of endurance sports. A winter run produces a light layer of perspiration; a summer run produces much more. It is a badge of honor because it represents hard work. Intuitively, you may think that as an athlete you sweat less than your sedentary counterparts. It is easy to conjure an image of someone struggling to make it through a workout in the summer heat, stopping to catch his breath while dripping wet. The fitter athlete would just glide through the run without breaking much of a sweat, right? Wrong. Your body undergoes several physiological changes when you adapt to the heat. In addition to increases in blood plasma volume and heat tolerance, one change that happens is an increase in sweat rate. The sweating process is your body’s attempt to cool itself through evaporation. The more you sweat, the more water evaporates, so a higher sweat rate makes you cool off more quickly. As you get fitter, your sweat glands become more efficient at producing sweat, and the end result is that you sweat more. This has consequences for how you should plan your nutrition. Make sure you are not skimping on hydration because you think you are sweating less. Fitness is not an excuse to let good fueling habits fall apart. Below, we dive into the science behind these claims.
As the temperature heats up, a familiar element of summer training is returning: sweat. In this blog post, we examine the science behind sweat rates in athletes, as well as the implications to your nutrition routine. Sweat is a well-known part of endurance sports. A winter run produces a light layer of perspiration; a summer run produces much more. It is a badge of honor because it represents hard work. Intuitively, you may think that as an athlete you sweat less than your sedentary counterparts. It is easy to conjure an image of someone struggling to make it through a workout in the summer heat, stopping to catch his breath while dripping wet. The fitter athlete would just glide through the run without breaking much of a sweat, right? Wrong. Your body undergoes several physiological changes when you adapt to the heat. In addition to increases in blood plasma volume and heat tolerance, one change that happens is an increase in sweat rate. The sweating process is your body’s attempt to cool itself through evaporation. The more you sweat, the more water evaporates, so a higher sweat rate makes you cool off more quickly. As you get fitter, your sweat glands become more efficient at producing sweat, and the end result is that you sweat more. This has consequences for how you should plan your nutrition. Make sure you are not skimping on hydration because you think you are sweating less. Fitness is not an excuse to let good fueling habits fall apart. Below, we dive into the science behind these claims.
