2021 · Ohta et al. — Reply to „Discussion: Drinking Hydrogen Water Enhances Endurance and Relieves Psychometric Fatigue: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study”
Super-Abstract
This is a short reply letter published in the Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, responding to a discussion of a hydrogen water endurance study. No abstract is available for this correspondence. For the underlying study on hydrogen water and athletic endurance, see the cited original research. For context on the discussion being replied to, see PMID 34585956.
Commentary
Reply letters and discussion commentaries are a standard part of the scientific discourse that follows publication of controlled trials. In this case, the original study (on hydrogen water, endurance, and psychometric fatigue) prompted a published discussion (PMID 34585956) to which the original authors — including Ohta, a prominent H₂ researcher — responded. Without access to the full text of this reply, the specific arguments made cannot be evaluated. Reply letters typically address methodological critiques, interpretation differences, or additional context. No abstract is publicly available, and no content can be responsibly summarized without the full text.
Key quotes
- „Reply to "Discussion: Drinking hydrogen water enhances endurance and relieves psychometric fatigue: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study".“ — the full title identifies this as a reply letter, not original research
Our assessment
This is a reply letter, not a primary study or review. No abstract is available via PubMed. The scientific content cannot be assessed without the full text. This entry is included for completeness of the literature record. For the original controlled trial on hydrogen water and endurance, readers should seek the primary publication. See DOI: 10.1139/cjpp-2021-0151.
Study design
- Type: reply letter / correspondence · n: n/a · H₂ delivery: hydrogen water (context of original study discussed)
- Abstract: not available · Full assessment not possible without full text
Source & links
Screenshot of the PubMed page
This page mirrors the published abstract (© the authors / publisher) for reference and citation. The canonical source is the PubMed record linked above. This is not medical advice.