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Developed by a doctor based on WHO oral rehydration science. Clinical evidence for actual dehydration scenarios. Contains sugar, but that is the point -- glucose aids sodium absorption.
DripDrop earns strong evidence marks because its formula is grounded in decades of ORS research. The sodium-glucose ratio is precisely calibrated for absorption efficiency. Unlike LMNT, it includes sugar intentionally -- because the science requires it for optimal sodium transport. Lower hype penalty as marketing is more clinically focused. Value is strong at $0.69/serving.
DripDrop is based on Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) science established by WHO research. The glucose-sodium co-transport mechanism is one of the most well-established findings in hydration science -- glucose enhances intestinal sodium (and therefore water) absorption. DripDrop contains 330mg sodium, 185mg potassium, and 39mg magnesium with a precise osmolarity optimized for rapid absorption. Clinical studies show ORS-based formulas rehydrate faster than water or sports drinks.
| Ingredient | Dose | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Sodium (from salt and sodium citrate) | 330mg | Optimal |
| Potassium (citrate) | 185mg | Adequate |
| Magnesium (citrate) | 39mg | Underdosed |
| Glucose | 7g | Optimal |
Why the true cost is higher
This product has 1 underdosed and 0 unknown-dose ingredients. To actually get clinically effective doses, you would need approximately 2 servings per day -- making your real cost $1.38 per effective dose instead of the listed $0.69.
Contains 7g sugar per serving, which bothers the keto/low-carb crowd (though this is functionally necessary). Lower sodium than LMNT, which may be insufficient for extreme athletes. Less trendy brand positioning. Transparency score lower because some flavoring details are not fully disclosed.
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