I highly doubt that it can cause kidney pain. I'm not a doctor, but am in the medical field. To the best of my knowledge, you could experience some nausea (due to the temperature difference of your body and the water) or brain freeze if you drink it too fast. As you drink water, your body warms it up while going to the rest of your body. Blood runs through your kidneys to get filtered not the water itself. The ending results (or the expelled substance) is excess water or water that could not be reabsorbed along with other mumbo jumbo. But, I guess you could say that you can get hypothermia if you submerge your WHOLE body in water of almost freezing temperatures, which could result in acute renal failure.
DRINKING COLD WATER DOES NOT CAUSE COLIC after excersize or if a horse is very hot drinking cold water straight away causes colic! sorry aabout the caps lock
The common cold is caused by a virus and is not caused by drinking water on an empty stomach early in the morning.
Drinking cold water can trigger a cough reflex because it can cause the airways to constrict and irritate the throat, leading to a coughing response.
Drinking cold water can trigger a cough reflex because it can cause the airways to constrict and irritate the throat, leading to a coughing response.
no not really. The fact is if you drink cold water
Yes.
No.
Drinking cold water can sometimes trigger a dry cough in some individuals, especially if they are sensitive to temperature changes or have a pre-existing condition like asthma.
You won't get a sore throat by drinking cold water.
Umm you usually do not throw up after drinking cold water.
One of the main benefits of drinking cold water is that it burns calories. When you drink cold water, your warm body cools off and needs to burn more calories to heat back up again. Therefore, drinking cold water helps burn more calories than drinking room temperature or warm water.
When you drink cold water, your body may start sweating as a way to regulate its temperature. The cold water can cause your body to work harder to maintain its internal temperature, leading to sweating as a cooling mechanism.