Posted on 01/19/2015 9:53:30 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
Increased sodium intake was not associated with higher risk of mortality over the course of 10 years in Medicare patients, Andreas P. Kalogeropoulos, MD, MPH, PhD, of Emory University, and colleagues reported in JAMA Internal Medicine.
"There's been a lot of controversy recently about the appropriate dietary sodium intake," Scott Hummel, MD, of the University of Michigan, said in an interview. "Low sodium content in the diet might increase the levels of aldosterone and catecholamines and other so-called neurohormones that might contribute to cardiovascular damage."
(Excerpt) Read more at medpagetoday.com ...
Sure. So can too little of a good thing.
The point being...who's to say?
The science goes back and forth which means they don't know jack and then throw in the fact everyone is different and there's usually more than one thing going on at one time, well, I think you get my point.
And that's all it is. My point, my opinion, works for me.
Again, imho, the stress that comes from worrying about stuff like this helps kill a lot of people, too.
This article made me pull out my notes from a 3 day homeopathic seminar on nutrition. The gall bladder regulates the sodium in the body and if yours has been removed it is important to drink celery juice to receive enough sodium. It is possible to reduce and soften gall stones and clean the gall bladder. The gall stones can be caused by a lack of sodium, caused by a gall bladder that needs a good cleaning of excess stuck bile.
What a vicious cycle!
All things in moderation - pass the salt
Besides, how are we going to ensure adequate intake of iodine? Eat seaweed every day?
I think organic celery is the only “safe” food anymore.
I take a diuretic for HPB and a potassium supplement to replace the potassium I lose because of that!.......................
” If you eat about 2 pounds of salt if will kill you. “
—
More proof of ingesting all things in moderation.
I’ve made it to age 82 by never giving up anything,ignoring all studies,and using my own good sense.
.
It's all in our genes.
And I might add, neither of us is over weight.
It's all in our genes.
And I might add, neither of us is over weight.
Then I need LOTS OF CHOCOLATE............................
I'm thinkin' probably so, considering His credentials.
True, but the body can usually get rid of normal excesses.
You’re a member of the Chocolate liberation movement as well ,are you? :)
*Any Chocolate seen will be liberated from the evil mr wrapper!*
The walk to the kitchen relieves your leg cramps. Your getting relief by putting salt in your mouth is just a psychological thing you’ve adopted.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/fairfaxtah/lessons/documents/africaPOSinfo.pdf
Why was the salt-gold trade important? People from North Africa desired gold and people from West Africa needed salt. There was a place called Wangara to the south of Ghana that was incredibly hot. The Wangaran people lost so much natural salt through sweating that they had to eat salt in their daily diets to survive. Unfortunately they had no salt in their land. Gold is what the Wangaran people had plenty of, and they were happy to trade it to get the salt they so desperately needed.
Just be careful about that exercise. Something a friend sent me:
Do Couch Potatoes Live Longer?
A new study confirms that doing aerobics and cardio shrink your telomeres.
Even a couch potato who does no exercise at all may be better off than the folks who run marathons and spend hours on treadmills.
Why is this important to you?
Because many of todays most widespread conditions and illnesses are associated with shorter telomeres. Telomeres are the tiny genetic clocks that tell your cells how old they are and how old to act.
Today, Ill show you the simple alternative to cardio that can help you maintain your telomeres, so you can live stronger and longer.
Its the opposite of aerobics and other endurance exercises, which shorten your telomeres and make you more susceptible to cancer and heart disease.
First, let me show you why you would never want to let anything shrink your telomeres
In one telomere study, people with the longest telomeres were the least likely to develop cancer. They were more than 10 times less likely to develop cancer than people with short telomeres.1 And when I read further into the study, I discovered that people with short telomeres are twice as likely to die from cancer.
Another study shows that the death rate for heart attacks is almost three times higher for people whose telomeres get short the fastest.
As bad as it is to have accelerated telomere loss, thats exactly what endurance exercise does. And the studies proving it have been completely ignored by mainstream fitness experts.
In one, researchers followed up on the known fact that long-term, cardio-type exercise damages your muscle cells. They decided to take it a little further and examine the damaged cells. One of the things they looked at was the length of the telomeres inside these muscle cells.
Athletes with exercise fatigue the athletes doing the long-duration cardio workouts had much shorter than normal telomeres.
The title of this study, as it appeared in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, sums it up perfectly: Athletes with exercise-associated fatigue have abnormally short muscle DNA telomeres
And, if thats not enough, in another more recent study researchers compared trained athletes to sedentary individuals.
They looked at the telomere lengths of trained athletes doing cardio vs. coach potatoes who did no exercise at all.
The couch potatoes had longer telomeres than the endurance athletes.
In fact, the experienced runners ALL had shorter telomeres than the people doing no exercise. Whats more, the longer the runners ran, the shorter their telomeres.
Fortunately for you, we now have the ability to influence the length of these tiny genetic clocks. You can have younger-acting cells and help avoid age-related problems by maintaining your telomere length.
The most powerful way to do this is to do the opposite of what fitness experts recommend.
Instead of hours of low-power exercises like running and cardio, you can maintain the length of your telomeres with shorter periods of exertion where you challenge yourself a bit more.
What you want to do instead is give your body a challenge, and do it over shorter periods of time.
For instance, one study done at the University of California in San Francisco found that vigorous exertion protects you from high stress by protecting your telomeres.3 And there are dozens more trials that show the same thing.
So,instead of cardiovascular endurance exercise, think cardiopulmonary exertion.
You can do this kind of exertion by keeping the time brief, and challenging your heart and lungs just a bit more with each set of exertion, and with each workout. This is called progressivity, and its what every modern workout program lacks.
Progressivity means you increase the difficulty (pick up the pace or increase the resistance) just a little bit with each set, and in each workout after that.
Doing just a little bit more, or changing it up in some way to give your heart and lungs a different challenge gives you the same benefit as increasing the time you spend working out.
Youll reprogram your muscles, heart and lungs to get stronger and more responsive. And youll reverse the wear and tear on your body and maintain your telomeres instead of breaking them down faster.
With that in mind, let me give you one movement you can do right in your own home, no equipment necessary, that will challenge your heart, lungs and several large muscle groups.
Its called a Dive Bomber.
1. Begin with your body looking like an upside-down V from the side. Position yourself like you would for a pushup, but with your butt up in the air, and your head between your arms. (If youre familiar with yoga, it should look like a downward-facing dog.)
2. Next, swoop your head, followed by your body, downward as if you were a bird or plane diving toward the ground.
3. Then drive your torso straight up, so that youre looking directly ahead. Keep the hips low to the ground and your hands directly below your shoulders. It will be as if you were trying to dive under a large ball hanging over your back. (In yoga, this position is called cobra.)
A true dive-bomber pushup means you repeat the above steps in reverse order until youre back to your original starting position, staying as fluid and smooth as possible.
If youve never done a dive bomber before, start with just a few. Go slowly, especially if running or some extreme workout program has caused you to hurt your back in the past. This movement is designed so that you can be progressive without going faster to increase the challenge.
You can add progressivity by holding the pose in each direction a bit longer, or do a few more than you did last time. Or you can do a calf raise or a set of calf raises before each Dive Bomb.
Working out should be fun. You dont have to do a regimented number of movements, and you dont have to strictly time yourself. You can change it up. Just keep it progressive.
This method of progressive exertion is part of the worlds first anti-aging fitness program.
The first time I revealed the scientific proof behind this new anti-aging category of fitness, it sent shockwaves through the medical community.
Because its the only exercise program that specifically addresses the changes of aging, and reverses them. It lets you do just the right amount of exertion to give you the anti-aging benefits.
If youd like to learn more about how this secret to keeping you telomeres longer works, and discover more ways you can build yourself a naturally younger body, its easy to do.
This program will restore your bodys natural metabolism and re-train your body to store energy in your muscles, just like your ancestors did
And it reprograms your body to dump extra fat.
Its called P.A.C.E., and you can do it at home without any special equipment. It takes just minutes instead of hours.
You can wake up each morning knowing you have almost no chance of having a heart attack even if it runs in your family
or have the strength and mobility to travel the world by yourself well after retirement
These are the kind of P.A.C.E. -inspired achievements my patients report.
These folks no longer worry about being overweight They dont worry about becoming dependent on others They have no need for prescription drugs And they dont fear sickness or disease!
Hah, Chocolate is good but I’ve never craved it.
Personally, I think there is a lot of truth to the Paleo Diet information that is out there. I think if people ate more sauerkraut and other fermented foods, they would probably have healthier guts. Think of all those countries where a live fermented food is considered a staple and they usually have fairly healthy populations (or used to). Australia = Vegemite. Germany = Sauerkraut. Scandinavia = Lutefisk. Japan = Natto and Funazushi. I think removing those foods and replacing with over processed everything has not been a good thing.
I have removed all processed dairy from my diet and now drink raw milk when I can get it. It clears up my sinuses better than Sudafed... the stuff is truly amazing.
The food pyramid is a government lie. Diet is subjective to each individual’s metabolic and genetic disposition. There is no “one size fits all” diet plan. In fact, what the government promotes can cause as much harm as good. The overconsumption of carbohydrates promoted by the government is without a doubt a major culprit in the growth of obesity in a less active society.
Basic training, Fort Jackson, SC in the fifties, there was always a jar of salt tablets by the water fountain.
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