A study from Liverpool John Moores University suggests morning urine color could predict stress responses. Researchers found adults with darker, more concentrated urine showed stronger cortisol reactions during stressful tasks than well-hydrated participants. Cortisol is the body’s main stress hormone. The study involved 32 healthy adults aged 18 to 35 who completed a simulated job interview with public speaking and math. While anxiety and heart rate rose equally for all, cortisol levels stayed elevated up to 30 minutes in those with darker urine. Participants with low daily fluid intake, about 1.3 liters, showed greater stress hormone activity than those drinking about 4.4 liters. (Story URL)
Your Morning Urine Color May Signal How Your Body Handles Stress

Australia police says Bondi attack gunmen travelled to Philippines
38m ago
US military says it carried out strikes on three vessels in eastern Pacific
47m ago
Former Raiders coach Mike White dies at 89
49m ago
Australia's Star Entertainment CEO Steve McCann steps down
4h ago
Australia's consumer sentiment slides in December on renewed angst over inflation, rates
3h ago
Stocks slide as investors on edge ahead of data, central bank meetings
1h ago






