What does water do for your brain?

Your brain is made up of 75% water. So drink up for better brain cognition, improved memory and much more. Here's how it works:

Water plays a vital role in every function of your body. Research reveals exactly how powerful hydration is for optimal brain health. If you want to experience clearer thinking, better memory and even enhanced focus and concentration, these cognitive benefits are just a sip of water away. Here's what you need to know to drink your way to better brain health.

Does water actually help your brain?

Your brain needs to stay hydrated because water helps to:

  • Balance your hormone levels: It plays a role in producing neurotransmitters and hormones, and is also necessary for lowering your levels of the stress hormone cortisol.
  • Maintain the fluid levels that protect your brain and spinal cord from trauma and injury.
  • Maintain neurogenesis (creation of new neurons) and overall brain cell health, including cell production, function and longevity.
  • Flush out toxins and metabolic waste that accumulates in the brain.
  • Maintain proper blood circulation, and transport vitamins, minerals and oxygen to your brain.

As hydration levels dip, the above brain functions begin to suffer. This is why dehydration is so closely correlated with poor brain health, and why neuroscientists and brain health experts recommend increasing your fluid intake to support and enhance your learning, thinking, focus and more.  

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How much of the brain is water?

Water makes up far more of your body and organs than you may realise. In fact, up to 90% of your body weight is actually water. But that's not all:

  • Your skin is more than 60% water
  • Your muscles are nearly 80% water
  • Your lungs are more than 70% water
  • Your bones are approximately 30% water

Water constitutes a large component of all these different organs and systems, and it plays an outsized role in ensuring each of these areas is working optimally. 

Nowhere is that more true than with your brain, which is nearly 75% water.

3 ways drinking more water benefits your brain

1. You'll experience improved psychological well-being and a better mood:

Your body needs to be well-hydrated to manufacture hormones and neurotransmitters like dopamine and serotonin (important chemicals that regulate your mood), and also to ensure the proper functioning of these neurotransmitters and chemical processes. 

Multiple studies have linked moderate levels of dehydration with significantly impaired mood, including lower rates of self-reported happiness and increased rates of depression and even anxiety. 

Additionally, dehydration increases your levels of the stress hormone cortisol. If left unmanaged, chronic stress and high cortisol levels can trigger numerous brain health problems and lead to:

  • A loss of brain cells
  • Decreased brain size
  • Disruption of your brain synapses, leading to psychological problems like social withdrawal and isolation.

2. You'll think and focus better

Water helps your brain cells communicate with each other, clears out toxins and waste that impairs brain function, and carries nutrients to your brain. This all falls apart if your fluid levels drop. 

Staying hydrated has been linked to:

  • Faster decision making and improved performance on cognitive tests
  • Better concentration and enhanced short-term memory
  • Higher test scores in an educational context
  • Improved focus and decreased mental fatigue
  • Stronger cognitive functioning, increased alertness, less confusion, and even improved learning

3. You'll fall asleep faster (and sleep deeper)

This is about far more than just catching more Zs. When you sleep, your brain heals itself, flushes out toxins, and even generates new neurons. This is why getting enough sleep may lead to brain health benefits such as:

  • A better memory
  • More mental alertness, focus and concentration
  • Enhanced psychological well-being and better moods
  • Faster response times
  • More balanced levels of brain hormones and neurotransmitters

Yet we're facing a global epidemic: Millions of people struggle to sleep. In a global survey, British adults ranked the worst in the world when it comes to sleep duration and sleep quality, followed by Canada, Ireland and the United States. 

Drinking more water can help support a good night's rest. Your body's water levels influence your internal sleep-wake cycles, your body temperature, your metabolism, your hormones, and many of the other functions that are linked with sleep health. Research suggests that this may be why people who are dehydrated tend to experience shorter sleep cycles.

How to stay hydrated

What are the signs and symptoms of dehydration?

Even a small amount of dehydration—as little as 1%—can affect your cognitive function. 

While everybody is different, some of the most common warning signs that you're dehydrated include:

  • Dark yellow urine, or very infrequent trips to the bathroom
  • Headaches
  • Dry eyes, dry skin or a dry mouth
  • Mood changes and mood swings, including anxiety, stress and irritability
  • Fluctuations in your energy levels, fatigue and exhaustion, mental fatigue, lack of mental alertness, etc.

How much water should you drink?

Reseach tells us that we should consume a minimum of 1/2 of our body weight in ounces. So, if you weigh 150 pounds the minimum amount of water per day for optimal brain health is 75 ounces. Add extra when consuming alcoholic or caffeinated beverages as these help to dehydrate you.

However, your specific needs may also increase due to vary your physical activity, your lifestyle habits and more. For instance, athletes who strenuously work out will require far more water on a daily basis than someone who lives a more sedentary lifestyle. 

Hydration strategies to get more fluids into your body

Some people struggle to drink enough water. Try these hydration tips and tricks to keep your body and mind well-hydrated:

  • Drink a glass of water right when you wake up. After a night of sleep, you're already dehydrated and it's a great way to jump-start your system.
  • Use prompts and reminders. For example, drink a glass of water around important milestones in your day (e.g., meals, work breaks, etc.). Or fill up a 2-litre water bottle and carry it around with you, aiming to finish it by the end of your day.
  • Make hydration fun. If you find plain water unappealing, increase the taste factor with natural, healthy additives like a sprig of fresh mint or a squeeze of fresh lemon juice, and infuse your water with slices of cucumbers or watermelon and make it into a healthy protein smoothie.

Remember, hydration is just one piece of the Parkinson's Solution programs. Focus your energy on an organized Plan-of-Action program to help you to decrease your medications and improve you Quality of Life! We encourage you to do this now, the longer you wait the more difficult it becomes.

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