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Lifestyle scienceLifestyle scienceEvidence Tier II

Hydration and biological aging: the NIH study that changed how we think about water

A 2023 NIH study of 11,255 adults followed for 30 years found that adults who stay well-hydrated age more slowly, develop fewer chronic diseases, and live longer. Serum sodium — a proxy for hydration — is one of the most powerful predictors of biological age.

Dr. James Okafor, MD
April 28, 2026
10 min read

Vitaei Review Board

The NIH hydration study

A 2023 study published in eBioMedicine by NIH researchers followed 11,255 adults over 30 years and found that those with higher serum sodium levels — a reliable proxy for chronic mild dehydration — had significantly higher risks of biological aging, chronic disease, and premature death. Adults with serum sodium above 144 mEq/L had a 50% higher risk of being biologically older than their chronological age, a 21% higher risk of premature death, and a 64% higher risk of developing chronic diseases including heart failure, stroke, atrial fibrillation, peripheral artery disease, chronic lung disease, diabetes, and dementia. The optimal serum sodium range for longevity was 137–142 mEq/L.

Mechanisms

  • Cellular senescence: dehydration increases extracellular osmolality, which activates cellular stress responses and accelerates senescent cell accumulation.
  • Cardiovascular: mild dehydration increases blood viscosity, elevates resting heart rate, and reduces cardiac output — all associated with accelerated cardiovascular aging.
  • Renal: chronic mild dehydration activates the vasopressin-aquaporin axis, which is associated with kidney fibrosis and accelerated renal aging.
  • Metabolic: dehydration impairs glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity, with even 1–2% dehydration reducing insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by 10–15%.
  • Cognitive: the brain is 75% water. Even mild dehydration (1–2% body weight loss) impairs attention, working memory, and executive function.

The practical protocol

  • Target serum sodium of 137–142 mEq/L. If you have had a recent blood panel, check your sodium level — it is the most direct measure of hydration status.
  • Drink 2–3 litres of water per day for most adults. Needs increase with exercise, heat, and high-protein diets.
  • Monitor urine colour: pale yellow indicates adequate hydration. Dark yellow or amber indicates dehydration. Clear urine may indicate overhydration.
  • Electrolytes matter: plain water alone can dilute electrolytes. Add a pinch of salt or use electrolyte tablets if drinking large volumes, particularly during exercise.
  • Hydrate on waking: you lose approximately 500ml of water overnight through respiration and perspiration. Drinking 500ml on waking before coffee or food restores this deficit.
About the author

Dr. James Okafor, MD — Sports medicine physician and longevity researcher.

Primary sources

Reviewed by a second author before publication. Conflicts of interest disclosed in the masthead. Vitaei does not accept advertising or sponsored placements. Read our editorial policy →