Drinking water before your blood test is essential. Here’s why:.

Published on

15/08/2025

Hydration and Blood Tests: The Hidden Summer Factor

Warm weather often brings a boost in energy and outdoor activity—but it can also quietly impact your health in ways you might not expect. At Randox Health, we see it all the time: subtle changes in hydration levels can influence blood biomarkers and potentially lead to misleading results.

In other words, what looks like a concern on your blood test could simply be a sign that you didn’t drink enough water before your appointment.

At Randox Health, we believe in data that reflects your true health status, not a temporary fluctuation.

Heat, Hydration, and Your Blood Results

As temperatures rise, your body works harder to stay cool—often through increased sweating and faster fluid loss. Even if you don’t feel thirsty, warmer weather can cause subtle dehydration that impacts your blood test results.


Which Biomarkers Are Sensitive to Dehydration?

While your whole body is affected by hydration, a few markers in particular are worth watching:

  • Creatinine
    A waste product from normal muscle activity. Dehydration reduces the kidneys’ ability to flush it efficiently, temporarily raising levels in your blood.

  • Urea
    A byproduct of protein metabolism. Less water means slower elimination, causing levels to rise.

  • eGFR (estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate)
    This is calculated based on creatinine. If your creatinine is elevated due to dehydration, your eGFR could appear artificially low.

These readings matter when assessing kidney function, and they’re all included in Randox’s Advanced, Signature, and Everyman/Everywoman blood packages.


Optimising for Accuracy: Preparing for Your Health Check

To help ensure your test reflects your normal state—not temporary dehydration—consider these tips:

  • Hydrate well the day before your appointment (especially in warmer weather)

  • Drink a glass or two of water the morning of your test

  • Avoid excessive caffeine or alcohol 24 hours before testing

  • If you’re exercising heavily, rehydrate with added electrolytes where needed

This is particularly important for annual health checks, where small differences in results year-on-year are used to spot long-term trends.


Beyond Hydration: Seeing the Full Picture

Dehydration isn’t the only factor that affects blood results. Alcohol use, medications, stress, diet, and physical activity all play a role. That’s why our comprehensive tests at Randox Health include:

  • Liver function markers (ALT, ALP, GGT, total protein)

  • Inflammatory indicators

  • Hormonal balance

  • Nutritional status

  • And much more

These panels work together to reveal whether what you’re seeing is an anomaly—or part of a bigger picture.


Book with Confidence

At Randox Health, our mission is to give you clarity—not confusion. We offer tailored support to help interpret your results in context, ensuring they reflect you at your best—not you on a dehydrated Tuesday morning.

Book your Randox Health Check today and gain deeper insight into your wellbeing—with results you can trust, no matter the season.