Join 65,000+ Looksmaxxing Members!

Register a FREE account today to become a member. Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox.

  • DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT TREATMENT WITHOUT LICENCED MEDICAL CONSULTATION AND SUPERVISION

    This is a public discussion forum. The owners, staff, and users of this website ARE NOT engaged in rendering professional services to the individual reader. DO NOT use the content of this website as an alternative to personal examination and advice from licenced healthcare providers. DO NOT begin, delay, or discontinue treatments and/or exercises without licenced medical supervision. Learn more

Info Hydration affects appetite

Dr. Nate

@doctor.nate on TikTok
Joined
Feb 13, 2026
Messages
72
Time Online
14h 21m
Reputation
146
Mechanism

After drinking some water, how much you want to eat hydrating foods like an apple or orange will decrease relative to how much you want to eat something like an apple pie or some chips [1, 2]. This is because dehydration decreases the appeal of foods with higher salt content, and increases the appeal of foods with higher water content [2]. This is important since foods with a higher water content tend to have a higher micronutrient density and lower caloric density, while salty foods tend to be highly processed and calorie dense [2].


Caloric Intake

In multiple papers where dehydrated and normally hydrated subjects were compared, the dehydrated subjects consumed significantly fewer calories than the euhydrated ones [3 - 5]. This effect is dependent on the food available. When cereal bars were provided, dehydrated subjects consumed 760 fewer calories [5], whereas when a wet porridge was provided, there was little effect [6]. Interestingly, drinking a lot of water shortly before a meal can increase satiety through gastric distention, so both reducing and increasing water intake can potentially make weight loss easier (depending on the situation) [1, 6].

  1. Rogers, P. J., Ferriday, D., Irani, B., Hoi, J. K. H., England, C. Y., Bajwa, K. K., & Gough, T. (2020). Sweet satiation: Acute effects of consumption of sweet drinks on appetite for and intake of sweet and non-sweet foods. Appetite, 149, 104631.
  2. Carroll, H. A., Templeman, I., Chen, Y. C., Edinburgh, R., Burch, E. K., Jewitt, J. T., ... & Betts, J. A. (2019). Hydration status affects thirst and salt preference but not energy intake or postprandial ghrelin in healthy adults: A randomised crossover trial. Physiology & behavior, 212, 112725.
  3. Pérez-Luco, C., Díaz-Castro, F., Jorquera, C., Troncoso, R., Zbinden-Foncea, H., Johannsen, N. M., & Castro-Sepulveda, M. (2019). Fluid restriction decreases solid food consumption post-exercise. Nutrients, 11(6), 1209.
  4. Engell, D. (1988). Interdependency of food and water intake in humans. Appetite, 10(2), 133-141.
  5. Shirreffs, S. M., Merson, S. J., Fraser, S. M., & Archer, D. T. (2004). The effects of fluid restriction on hydration status and subjective feelings in man. British Journal of Nutrition, 91(6), 951-958.
  6. Corney, R. A., Horina, A., Sunderland, C., & James, L. J. (2015). Effect of hydration status and fluid availability on ad-libitum energy intake of a semi-solid breakfast. Appetite, 91, 399-404.
 
Register to hide this ad
Mechanism

After drinking some water, how much you want to eat hydrating foods like an apple or orange will decrease relative to how much you want to eat something like an apple pie or some chips [1, 2]. This is because dehydration decreases the appeal of foods with higher salt content, and increases the appeal of foods with higher water content [2]. This is important since foods with a higher water content tend to have a higher micronutrient density and lower caloric density, while salty foods tend to be highly processed and calorie dense [2].


Caloric Intake

In multiple papers where dehydrated and normally hydrated subjects were compared, the dehydrated subjects consumed significantly fewer calories than the euhydrated ones [3 - 5]. This effect is dependent on the food available. When cereal bars were provided, dehydrated subjects consumed 760 fewer calories [5], whereas when a wet porridge was provided, there was little effect [6]. Interestingly, drinking a lot of water shortly before a meal can increase satiety through gastric distention, so both reducing and increasing water intake can potentially make weight loss easier (depending on the situation) [1, 6].

  1. Rogers, P. J., Ferriday, D., Irani, B., Hoi, J. K. H., England, C. Y., Bajwa, K. K., & Gough, T. (2020). Sweet satiation: Acute effects of consumption of sweet drinks on appetite for and intake of sweet and non-sweet foods. Appetite, 149, 104631.
  2. Carroll, H. A., Templeman, I., Chen, Y. C., Edinburgh, R., Burch, E. K., Jewitt, J. T., ... & Betts, J. A. (2019). Hydration status affects thirst and salt preference but not energy intake or postprandial ghrelin in healthy adults: A randomised crossover trial. Physiology & behavior, 212, 112725.
  3. Pérez-Luco, C., Díaz-Castro, F., Jorquera, C., Troncoso, R., Zbinden-Foncea, H., Johannsen, N. M., & Castro-Sepulveda, M. (2019). Fluid restriction decreases solid food consumption post-exercise. Nutrients, 11(6), 1209.
  4. Engell, D. (1988). Interdependency of food and water intake in humans. Appetite, 10(2), 133-141.
  5. Shirreffs, S. M., Merson, S. J., Fraser, S. M., & Archer, D. T. (2004). The effects of fluid restriction on hydration status and subjective feelings in man. British Journal of Nutrition, 91(6), 951-958.
  6. Corney, R. A., Horina, A., Sunderland, C., & James, L. J. (2015). Effect of hydration status and fluid availability on ad-libitum energy intake of a semi-solid breakfast. Appetite, 91, 399-404.
I heard 1gram of water has 3 calories
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top