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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Just North of Dallas
    Posts
    312
    YES YES YES!!!!!

    Pedialyte is excellent for rehydration and the article is RIGHT ON THE MONEY!!! That is why, when you drink sports drinks you get THIRSTIER!!!

    Pedialyte comes in flavors that are more palatable than the plain, and there are cheaper store brands available. It's usually in the baby food section at the grocery store.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    38
    Do you have "endura" hydration formula, with mag and calcium?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    160
    I have to say the the combative tone of the article is highly off-putting, I think the author would reach more people with a calm, reasoned argument. I agree gatorade is not great for endurance sports, it's just too sweet, and there's not enough sodium.

    Pedialyte is too expensive though, I use the Clif electrolyte replacement (lemonade flavor), it's got a ton of potassium and sodium and isn't so sickeningly sweet. It's also organic, and at $15 for a giant canister of powder is much more reasonable than some of the other powders out there.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Just North of Dallas
    Posts
    312
    The store brands of pedialyte are MUCH cheaper - a couple of bucks. They are the same as the pedialyte though.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    88
    Does pedialyte come in a powdered form, or do you have to buy the pre-mixed kind?

    E-caps makes a straight electrolyte replacement called Endurolytes. You can take them as capsules or mix the powedered form into your water, although the end result tastes like salt water.

    My question is, if you can only consume x grams of carbohydrate without dehydrating yourself, how do you keep yourself from bonking? On long rides, you need both sufficient hydration and nutrition. No matter what, you're going to increase the concentration of carbohydrate in your stomach at some point, and will need water to digest that. It's unavoidable. I wish he's explained a little more about how the maltodextrin figures into the equation.

    A friend of mine got hyponatremia drinking Powerade on a hike of the grand canyon. The ER doc said they've taken to calling it "Powerade syndrome" because Powerade has so little sodium - less than half that in Gatorade. It never occurred to me that even in the commercial grocery store drinks, there can be a substantial difference.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    1,516
    hmmmm... that's pretty interesting... gonna have to look into it more...

    I currently use Cytomax... haven't compared it to gatorade but gatorade makes me sick to my stomach when riding so either way that's out for me... Cytomax isn't as icky sweet, comes in powder and seems to work really well, at least for me.

    my bro did a double century a couple weeks ago and used e-caps... first time he used 'em but he swears he could tell the difference and benefit from them!
    There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness".

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Just North of Dallas
    Posts
    312
    It isnt the carbs so much - you can have carbs in your fluid. The problem is the lack of sodium in the stuff we drink. We should all mass email gatorade and tell them to make a REAL sports drink....

 

 

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