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Drinking Cold Water A wrong concept of weight loss

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Recently I found that, there is a wrong concept to many people that drinking cold water can reduce weight. They sowed me few interesting thermodynamics prove (actually they were wrong). They showed that if some one drinks cold water, it will be increase its temperature inside our body. In another word, it will burn few calories to increase its temperature. In this way, some one can burn their calories and can loose their weight. They also showed me if I drink 1000g (around 1 L) water having temperature 5 deg. C and it increase its temperature 25 deg C (to reach our body temperature), then total calories loss will be 1000 X 25 = 25000 calories (as loss of calories = amount of water in grams X increase of temperature in degree Celsius). So, if some one drinks 5 L cold water, he can burn 125000 calories daily. 1g fat contains about 9.1 kilocalories. So, 125000 calories is almost equivalent to loss of 14 g fat/day, about 0.4 kg/month. Its sounds well that only drinking cold water can burn 0.4 kg fat/month.But is it true??The answer is NO!!There is a difference between calories uses in physics and physiology. In physics, the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a gram of water from 14.5 ?C to 15.5 ?C at standard atmospheric pressure is called 1 calorie but in physiology, the energy needed to increase the temperature of a kg of water by 1 ?C is called 1 calorie. So, physiological calorie is 1000 times larger than calorie used in physics. 125000 calorie (used in physics) is equivalent to only 125 calorie (used in physiology). 125 calorie is almost equivalent to 0.01g fat. Now think, you need about 100 days to loss 1g of fat. And if you want to loss 1 kg fat, you need 274 years!!!I think, the main reason behind the wrong concept is the conflict of two type of calorie. So don’t be confused, be confident, drinking cold water can’t loose weight.

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Let's say that you need to raise the temperature of the water by 30C when you drink it (from 7C to body temperature). Using the specific heat capacity of water, we can work out that drinking a litre of water would use 125,610J of energy. That works out at almost exactly 30kcal. Using that energy you would lose 0.0039g of fat per litre of water you drink. Drink your two litres a day and you'd need 352 years to lose a kg.It is incredibly annoying when people on TV use this information that you can "drink yourself thin" but it is usually just lazy researchers and people using their own poorly remembered, incorrect information as a source of medical advice, which then gets printed, published and broadcast hundreds of times.

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Not to mention the fact that they're using one's weight as something that doesn't fluctuate. One person's weight could change daily, if you really think about it. And someone isn't going to drink just water to lose weight, they need food, so whatever fat the water got rid of, could just as easily be replaced by the days meals. Some of it isn't science, some of it is just common sense.

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I agree that drinking cold water cannot help reduce weight, because drinking cold water during your meal is satisfying rather than drinking warm water and if you are satisfied you tend to eat more.

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The only way that I figured it would do anything is by drinking such insane amounts of water, you are probably not very hungry to eat anything else that day, and with little food = little calories = losing weight once the water weight goes away. But I like my food too much to even try something like that. Let alone the fact that it can't be very healthy.It should be illegal to make false claims such as these because they could end up doing more harm than good to a person.

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So, what happens if you drink 7 litres of water a day? Do math.... You'll spend half of your day in the bathroom :)Just kidding. I only wanted to agree with midnightvamp: it MUST be illegal to make this kind of false claims, it harms people's health. Anyway, I'm sure there are worse diets out there that drinking cold water.

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Those are some nice facts indeed. It's true that you can't drink yourself thin. But I usually drink water when I get hungry, and it seems to work. It's possible that the only reason it works is because I believe it works. But that's good enough for me.

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oooh drinking cold water makes you lose weight? i never knew that! i also know that drinking water helps keep your brain awake and keeps everything healthy since almost all of your body is made of water it just needs a refresh!Drinking water helps you concentrate as it says in school.

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Good point; it can be misleading the way we refer to kilocalories as just calories in terms of nutrition. I've found that water does help you lose weight, but not because of its temperature...rather, the "fullness factor" can help keep you from eating too much food and allows you to be satisfied with less.

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juuulieeeDrinking Cold Water

Drinking cold water alone may not help you lose weight but drinking water often, especially when your hungry does. I've been told once by the cook at my work place that it's best to drink atleast 4 glasses of water before you eat because it gives you more of that full feeling and it will prevent you from eating alot during that meal. I've been doing it lately along with exercising and it's actually working believe it or not.

-reply by julie

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Came across this topic by accident. You make one mistake: you apply the cal -> kcal substitution twice.Normally when people speak about calories in food, they are actually talking about kilocalories. You say "1g fat contains about 9.1 kilocalories". Indeed! This is where the mistake is usually made. They say it's 9.1 cal when in fact it is 9100 calories. But then you make the mistake of "correcting" the specific heat of water by converting it to "physiological" calories. If you're going to compare values, you do it in the same system, so if you translate fat into "fysics" calories, you must compare that with the specific heat of water in the same "fysics" calories, and not do the conversion to "physiology" calories. It's like comparing yen and dollar, if you want to know which is more, 100 yen or 1 dollar, you can either convert the 100 yen in dollars (1.24 is more than 1 dollar) , or the dollar in yens (100 yen is more than 80.46 yen), but not both! Just think of actually burning the fat (or petrol, which contains about 7.5 kcal per gram, just a bit less than fat) to heat a kettle of water, then you'll realize that burning 0.01 gram of fat won't heat one liter of water by 25 degrees.

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Cold water is not as good for hydration as room temperature. The theory is that the cold water causes the blood vessels surrounding stomach to shrink and slowing absorption.The problem is that as the COLD drinks pass through our system, they solidify the fats from the foods we have just eaten or are eating at present. This makes the body find it harder to digest and disperse the unwanted fats from our body.However, if we simply swap our cold drinks for a warm drink (warm water/ coffee/tea/herbals) the warm fluids help the fats in our foods to remain fluid and so easing the digestive system and helping the fats pass through our body and reduce risk of clogged arteries.

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