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Salt Intake Requirement
  Salt Intake Need
 Signs, symptoms, indicators
 Contributing risk factors
 Treatment recommendations
 


When drinking lots of water throughout the day, salts (especially sodium) are washed through the kidneys and voided. Increasing salt in the diet helps prevent any imbalance as a result of significant water consumption and low salt intake. For every two quarts of water consumed per day consider adding 1/2 teaspoon of salt.





Signs, symptoms & indicators of Salt Intake Requirement:
Symptoms - General  Dizziness when standing up

Symptoms - Muscular

  Leg/foot cramps

Symptoms - Sleep

  (Frequent) difficulty falling asleep

Risk factors for Salt Intake Requirement:
Symptoms - Food - Beverages  Sufficient water consumption

Symptoms - Food - Intake

Counter-indicators:
  (Low/high) added salt consumption (confirmed)

Symptoms - Muscular

  History of leg/foot cramps

Recommendations and treatments for Salt Intake Requirement:
Mineral  Increased Salt Consumption


KEY
Weak or unproven link
Strong or generally accepted link
Very strongly or absolutely counter-indicative
Highly recommended


GLOSSARY

Kidneys (Kidney, Renal)
Bean-shaped organs, each about the size of a fist. They are located near the middle of the back, just below the rib cage. The kidneys are sophisticated reprocessing machines, each day handling about 50 gallons of blood to sift out about half a gallon of waste products and extra water. The waste and extra water become urine, which flows to the bladder through tubes called ureters. The actual filtering occurs in tiny units inside the kidneys called nephrons. Every kidney has about a million nephrons. In a nephron, a glomerulus -- which is a tiny blood vessel, or capillary -- intertwines with a tiny urine-collecting tube called a tubule. A complicated chemical exchange takes place, as waste materials and water leave your blood and enter your urinary system. The kidneys recycle chemicals such as sodium, phosphorus, and potassium and thus regulate their levels. Renal: Pertaining to the kidneys.

Sodium
An essential mineral that our bodies regulate and conserve. Excess sodium retention increases the fluid volume (edema) and low sodium leads to less fluid and relative dehydration. The adult body averages a total content of over 100 grams of sodium, of which a surprising one-third is in bone. A small amount of sodium does get into cell interiors, but this represents only about ten percent of the body content. The remaining 57 percent or so of the body sodium content is in the fluid immediately surrounding the cells, where it is the major cation (positive ion). The role of sodium in the extracellular fluid is maintaining osmotic equilibrium (the proper difference in ions dissolved in the fluids inside and outside the cell) and extracellular fluid volume. Sodium is also involved in nerve impulse transmission, muscle tone and nutrient transport. All of these functions are interrelated with potassium.

Teaspoon (Teaspoons, tsp)
Equivalent to 5cc (5ml).




Last updated: Apr 13, 2008


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