In a clinical trial, 80% of athletes who consumed H2OMAX treated water increased or maintained blood plasma volume while undergoing a strenuous 90-minute exercise in an advanced (99o F) environmental chamber, compared to 27% of athletes who consumed untreated water. In comparison, 60% of athletes experienced a loss in plasma volume when drinking untreated water.
Blood plasma is made up of 92% water and carries nutrients to your organs and muscles, and waste to your kidneys.
Drinking H2OMAX treated water will allow you to keep more water in your bloodstream for superior hydration. With an increase of water in your blood, your body is able to maintain elevated levels of blood plasma volume so you can perform longer and recover faster.
In 2018, a double-blind and randomized cross-over clinical hydration study was performed. Athletes were subjected to a strenuous 90-minute exercise in one of the most advanced environmental chambers in Canada. The study, in its entirety, was carried out by a hydration and thermophysiology expert. In support of this, the exercise protocol for the study was peer-reviewed by two other hydration experts.
Read the clinical trialThe study demonstrated that 73% of athletic subjects showed an increase in their blood plasma volume when drinking H2OMAX treated water, compared to only 27% with an increase in blood plasma volume with untreated water.
When analyzing dehydration prevention further, the study displayed 87% of subjects with having increased or unchanged blood plasma levels with <33 treated water. This conclusion demonstrates groundbreaking effects in the effort to combat dehydration.
One of Canada's most advanced (37ºC / 99ºF) environmental chamber
Strenuous 90-minute exercise on a stationary bicycle
Maintain or increase blood plasma volume levels
H2OMAX is powered by the <33TM technology. At a high level, the technology is a passive antenna not unlike an RFID device (key fob, door access card), except it is finely tuned to work with frequencies to affect the solubility of water.
Learn moreIn red and white cells, your blood contains 55% plasma. During a marathon, athletes typically experience a loss between 2% and 7% of blood plasma. In the case of severe dehydration, blood plasma volume drops dramatically and systems are critically impacted.
Dehydration is a slippery slope insofar as your body can only absorb a limited quantity of water per hour. When the body falls behind, it can be medically damaging to consume gallons of water in an effort to repair dehydration.