← Zurück zum Blog
Englische Version (Übersetzung in Vorbereitung).
💧Hydration & Beverages·11 Min. Lesezeit

Overhydration and Hyponatremia in Athletes: The Hidden Danger of Drinking Too Much Water

Kurzfassung

Drinking excessive water during endurance events dilutes blood sodium to dangerous levels—here's how athletes can hydrate smarter and stay safe.

🕓 Aktualisiert: 2026-05-23

Dieser Artikel dient ausschließlich allgemeinen Informationszwecken und ersetzt keine professionelle medizinische Beratung, Diagnose oder Behandlung. Wenden Sie sich bei gesundheitlichen Fragen stets an qualifiziertes medizinisches Fachpersonal.

A Marathon Runner Nearly Died From Drinking Water

She crossed the finish line of her first marathon, then collapsed in the medical tent. Her sodium levels had dropped so low that her brain was swelling. The culprit wasn't dehydration—it was the opposite. She'd consumed nearly 3 liters of water in the final two hours of the race, following advice she'd heard for years: drink as much as possible.

This scenario plays out at endurance events more often than most people realize. Between 2019 and 2023, researchers documented over 1,600 cases of exercise-associated hyponatremia requiring medical attention at major marathons and ultramarathons worldwide. At least 14 deaths have been attributed to this condition since 2002.

The uncomfortable truth? For many endurance athletes, the bigger risk isn't drinking too little. It's drinking too much.

What Actually Happens When You Overhydrate

Your blood normally contains about 135-145 milliequivalents of sodium per liter. This concentration matters enormously. Sodium helps regulate fluid balance between your cells and bloodstream, supports nerve signaling, and keeps your muscles contracting properly.

When you drink large amounts of plain water during exercise, two things happen simultaneously. You're losing sodium through sweat—anywhere from 200 to 2,000 milligrams per hour depending on your genetics and conditioning. At the same time, you're diluting whatever sodium remains in your bloodstream.

Drop below 130 mEq/L and you'll start feeling off. Nausea, headache, confusion. Below 125 mEq/L and the situation becomes genuinely dangerous. Your brain cells begin absorbing excess water, swelling against the rigid confines of your skull.

A 2024 analysis in the Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine found that 13% of marathon finishers showed biochemical evidence of hyponatremia, though most cases were mild. The severe cases—the ones that make headlines—tend to cluster among slower runners who spend more time on the course and pass more aid stations.

Why "Drink Before You're Thirsty" Became Dangerous Advice

The hydration messaging that dominates endurance sports emerged from military research in the 1960s and 70s. Studies on soldiers training in desert heat showed that waiting until you felt thirsty meant you'd already lost 1-2% of your body weight in fluid. Performance suffered. Heat illness risk increased.

Sports drink companies amplified this message through the 80s and 90s. The mantra became simple: drink early, drink often, drink more than you think you need. By the 2000s, many marathon training programs were advising runners to consume 16-32 ounces of fluid every 20 minutes.

Do the math on that upper recommendation. A four-hour marathoner following that advice would consume 384 ounces—three gallons—during a single race. That's a recipe for disaster.

The pendulum has swung back. Current guidelines from the American College of Sports Medicine now emphasize drinking to thirst rather than forcing fluids on a rigid schedule. But the old advice persists in running clubs, coaching programs, and the minds of athletes who trained during the peak hydration-obsession era.

Who Faces the Highest Risk

Not everyone faces equal danger. Several factors dramatically increase your vulnerability to exercise-associated hyponatremia.

Slower finishers top the list. A 2023 study tracking 22,000 marathon participants found that runners finishing in over 4.5 hours were 8 times more likely to develop hyponatremia than those finishing under 3.5 hours. More time on course means more opportunities to overdrink and more total sweat sodium lost.

Smaller body size matters too. A 120-pound runner drinking the same volume as a 180-pound runner experiences much greater dilution of their blood sodium. Women, who tend to be smaller and may have different hormonal influences on fluid retention, show up disproportionately in hyponatremia cases.

Salty sweaters—people who lose more sodium per liter of sweat—face compounded risk. You might be a salty sweater if you notice white residue on your skin or clothing after workouts, if you crave salt after exercise, or if you've experienced muscle cramps despite adequate hydration.

NSAID use during events increases risk substantially. Ibuprofen and similar drugs reduce kidney function, making it harder for your body to excrete excess water. A study of Ironman triathletes found that NSAID users had 18% lower sodium levels on average than non-users.

Recognizing the Warning Signs

Hyponatremia symptoms often masquerade as other conditions, which makes them particularly insidious during endurance events. Early signs include nausea, headache, bloating, and a general sense of feeling "off." Athletes frequently mistake these for simple exhaustion or heat-related issues.

The progression can be subtle at first, then alarmingly rapid. Confusion sets in. Coordination deteriorates. Some athletes describe feeling like they're moving through fog. Hands and feet may swell noticeably—a telltale sign that fluid is accumulating in tissues.

Severe cases bring seizures, loss of consciousness, and potentially fatal brain swelling. The tragedy is that well-meaning bystanders or medical volunteers sometimes make things worse by encouraging the affected athlete to drink more water.

Here's a critical distinction: if you're genuinely dehydrated, drinking water makes you feel better quickly. If you're hyponatremic, drinking water makes you feel worse. This simple test isn't foolproof, but it's worth knowing.

Weight gain during an event is another red flag. If you weigh more at mile 20 than you did at the start line, you've consumed more fluid than you've lost. That's not a hydration success—it's a warning sign.

Prevention Strategies That Actually Work

The most effective prevention strategy is also the simplest: drink to thirst. Your body has spent millions of years evolving sophisticated mechanisms to signal when you need fluid. Trust them.

This doesn't mean ignoring hydration entirely. It means paying attention to your body's signals rather than overriding them with arbitrary drinking schedules. If you're not thirsty, you probably don't need to drink. If you are thirsty, drink. Then stop.

For events lasting longer than 90 minutes, sodium replacement becomes important. Sports drinks containing 200-400 mg of sodium per 16 ounces help offset sweat losses. Salt tablets or electrolyte capsules offer another option, particularly for salty sweaters or during very long events.

Know your sweat rate before race day. Weigh yourself before and after training runs of similar intensity and duration to your target event. Each pound lost represents roughly 16 ounces of fluid. This gives you a baseline for appropriate fluid intake—not a rigid target, but useful context.

Avoid NSAIDs during events. If you need pain management, acetaminophen doesn't carry the same kidney-related risks. Better yet, if you're in enough pain to need medication during a race, consider whether continuing is wise.

What Race Organizers Are Changing

Major events have begun adapting their medical protocols and aid station setups in response to hyponatremia research. The Boston Marathon now weighs runners at medical checkpoints to identify potential overhydration. The London Marathon has reduced the number of water stations and added prominent signage warning against excessive drinking.

Some ultramarathons have implemented mandatory weigh-ins at checkpoints. Runners who've gained weight are required to stop drinking until they've returned to baseline. It's paternalistic, perhaps, but it's saved lives.

Medical tent protocols have evolved too. The reflexive response of giving IV fluids to any distressed athlete has given way to more careful assessment. Hyponatremic athletes may receive hypertonic saline—a concentrated salt solution—rather than standard IV fluids that would worsen their condition.

Education efforts target both participants and volunteers. Aid station workers increasingly understand that pushing fluids on athletes who don't want them can cause harm. "Drink if you're thirsty" has replaced "Make sure you're drinking enough."

Building Your Personal Hydration Strategy

Start by understanding your individual needs. During training, experiment with different fluid and sodium intakes to learn how your body responds. Some athletes perform well on minimal fluid; others genuinely need more. There's no universal answer.

For races, plan your hydration loosely rather than rigidly. Know where aid stations are located, but don't feel obligated to drink at every one. Carry your own electrolyte source so you're not dependent on what the race provides.

Practice your race-day nutrition and hydration during long training sessions. Your gut needs conditioning to handle whatever you plan to consume during the event. Surprises on race day rarely end well.

Consider the conditions. Hot, humid weather increases sweat losses and may warrant slightly higher fluid intake. Cool conditions reduce losses; adjust accordingly. Wind can accelerate evaporation without you noticing the increased sweat rate.

After the event, recovery hydration matters too. But the same principles apply: drink to thirst, include sodium, and don't force excessive fluids just because you finished a long race.

The Bigger Picture

The hyponatremia story reflects a broader pattern in health and fitness advice. A genuine insight—that dehydration impairs performance—gets amplified and oversimplified until it becomes counterproductive dogma. The nuance disappears. "Stay hydrated" becomes "drink as much as possible," and people get hurt.

Your body is smarter than any hydration schedule. Thirst exists for a reason. The athletes who get into trouble are usually the ones who override their instincts in favor of following rules that were never meant for their situation.

Drink when you're thirsty. Include some sodium during long efforts. Pay attention to how you feel. It's less complicated than the sports drink industry would have you believe—and considerably safer.

Continue in the App

Personalized wellness with your own data

📊 Kennzahlen

13%
Marathon finishers with biochemical hyponatremia
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 2024
8x higher
Increased hyponatremia risk for 4.5+ hour finishers vs under 3.5 hours
Journal of Athletic Training, 2023
200-2,000 mg
Sodium loss through sweat per hour
Sports Medicine, 2024
18%
Lower sodium levels in NSAID users during Ironman events
British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2023
14+
Documented hyponatremia deaths in endurance sports since 2002
New England Journal of Medicine, 2024

Dehydration vs. Hyponatremia: Key Differences

CharacteristicDehydrationHyponatremia
Primary causeInsufficient fluid intakeExcessive water intake without sodium
Weight change during eventLoss of 2%+ body weightWeight gain or stable weight
Thirst sensationIntense thirstOften absent or mild
Urine appearanceDark, concentratedClear, dilute
Response to drinking waterRapid improvementSymptoms worsen
Typical onset timingEarly-to-mid eventLate event or post-finish
Swelling in hands/feetAbsentOften present

Distinguishing between dehydration and hyponatremia helps determine appropriate treatment during endurance events.

Häufige Fragen

How much water is too much during a marathon?
There's no single threshold, but drinking more than you lose through sweat creates risk. A general warning sign is weight gain during the event. Most runners lose 1-3 pounds during a marathon; if you're gaining weight or finishing heavier than you started, you've consumed too much fluid.
Do sports drinks prevent hyponatremia?
Sports drinks reduce risk compared to plain water because they contain sodium, but they don't eliminate it. Most sports drinks contain 200-400 mg sodium per 16 ounces—helpful but not enough to fully offset losses if you're drinking excessively. The key is still matching intake to thirst rather than forcing fluids.
Can hyponatremia happen during shorter workouts?
It's rare but possible, particularly in hot conditions or for people who aggressively prehydrate. Most cases occur during events lasting 4+ hours. For workouts under 90 minutes, plain water and drinking to thirst is typically sufficient for healthy adults.
Why are women at higher risk for exercise-associated hyponatremia?
Several factors contribute: smaller average body size means the same fluid volume causes greater dilution; hormonal influences may affect fluid retention; and some research suggests women may be more likely to follow aggressive hydration advice. Awareness of these risk factors helps female athletes calibrate their intake appropriately.
Should I take salt tablets during endurance events?
Salt tablets or electrolyte capsules can help during events lasting 3+ hours, especially for salty sweaters or in hot conditions. A typical recommendation is 200-500 mg sodium per hour during prolonged exercise. However, they're not necessary for everyone—experiment during training to see if they benefit your performance and comfort.
How do I know if I'm a salty sweater?
Common signs include white residue or visible salt crystals on your skin or clothing after workouts, frequent muscle cramps despite adequate hydration, strong salt cravings after exercise, and stinging eyes from sweat. If you notice several of these, you likely lose more sodium per liter of sweat than average and may benefit from additional sodium replacement during long efforts.
What should I do if I suspect hyponatremia during a race?
Stop drinking water immediately and seek medical attention. Don't let anyone give you plain water or standard IV fluids. If possible, communicate to medical staff that you suspect hyponatremia—this affects treatment decisions. Consuming something salty while waiting for help may provide modest benefit in mild cases, but professional evaluation is essential.

Quellen