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- <html>
- <head><title>Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- I have spoken to many people who believe they should drink "8 glasses of water every day," in addition to
- their normal foods, even if they don't feel thirsty. Many doctors still recite this dangerous slogan, but
- the addition of the qualifying phrase, "or other liquids," has become common.
- </p>
- <p>
- The amount of water a person needs is extremely variable, depending on things such as metabolic rate,
- activity, and the temperature and humidity of the air. Working hard in hot, dry weather, it's possible to
- drink more than two quarts per hour for more than eight hours, without forming any urine, because all of the
- water is lost by evaporation. But in very hot, humid weather, a person with a low metabolic rate can be
- endangered by the smallest amount of water (e.g., "Meteorological relations of eclampsia in Lagos, Nigeria,"
- Agobe, et al., 1981).
- </p>
- <p>
- Most foods contain a considerable amount of water, usually more than 70% of their weight, and some water is
- produced in cells by metabolism. The function of water in the organism has been mystified and neglected
- because of some deeply rooted cultural images of the nature of organisms and their cellular make-up.
- </p>
- <p>
- One silly image that has been perpetuated by schools and textbooks is that biochemistry consists of chemical
- reactions that occur in substances dissolved in water, and that the water is retained by cells because they
- are enclosed by an oily membrane, and because of the osmotic forces produced by the dissolved substances.
- Most grade school kids have seen an osmometer made from an egg, in which the egg causes a column of water to
- rise, and have heard the explanation that this has something to do with the way cells work. Membrane pumps
- are invoked to explain the differences in solute concentrations and "osmotic pressure" inside and outside
- cells. The story is that invisible things on the surface of a cell (in its "membrane") force dissolved
- molecules to move in ways that they wouldn't move spontaneously by diffusion, and that water passively
- follows the "actively transported" solutes. But the evidence shows that both water and its solutes are
- regulated by the bulk phase of the cell, not its surface.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In some cultural settings, animism has a kind of charm (water sprites, and such), but in the culture of
- medicine and biology, the animistic conceptualization of cells and their mechanisms has been very
- destructive, because it gets in the way of coherent understanding of physiology. Practically every disease
- would be approached differently if the physiology of water and ions were allowed to advance beyond the
- animistic doctrines of mainstream medicine, such as the "membrane pumps." If all the substances that are
- said to be "actively transported" by pumps into, or out of, cells are considered, the amount of energy
- required to operate the pumps is at least 15 times larger than the total energy available to cells.
- "Specific" pumps are commonly invoked even for novel synthetic chemicals, to explain their unequal
- distribution, inside and outside cells. In many biological situations water is ignored, but when it becomes
- an issue, its distribution is usually mechanistically subordinated to the solutes that are actively
- "pumped."
- </p>
- <p>
- Cells aren't osmometers, in the sense the textbooks say. They do control their water content, but no
- "membrane pumps" are needed. It's more accurate to think of the water of cells as being "dissolved in
- cells," somewhat the way water is contained in jello or boiled eggs. The cell controls its hydration by the
- processes that control its structure, its metabolism, and movements, because water is part of its deepest
- structures and essential functions. The cell's adjustments to changes of hydration and volume appear to be
- regulated by contractile proteins and energy metabolism (Minkoff and Damadian, 1976).
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Any stress or energy deficit that disturbs cellular structure or function disturbs the interactions among
- water, proteins, and other components of the cell. Excitation causes a cell to take up extra water, not by
- osmosis resulting from an increase in the concentration of solutes in the cell, or because the membrane has
- become porous, but because the structural proteins of the cell have momentarily increased their affinity for
- water.
- </p>
- <p>
- This increased affinity is similar to the process that causes a gel to swell in the presence of alkalinity,
- and it is related to the process called electroosmosis, in which water moves toward a higher negative
- charge. Intense excitation or stress increases the cell's electrically negative charges, and causes it to
- become more alkaline and to swell. Swelling and alkalinity cause the cell to begin the synthesis of DNA, in
- preparation for cell division. Mitogens and carcinogens, including estrogen, cause cells to become alkaline
- and to swell, and substances that block the cell's alkalinization (such as the diuretics acetazolamide and
- amiloride) inhibit cell division. Prolonged alkaline stress alone can cause malignant transformation of
- kidney cells (Oberleithner, et al., 1991).
- </p>
- <p>
- The general idea of "stress" is useful, because it includes processes such as fatigue, osmotic pressure
- changes, disturbed pH, and the enzyme changes that follow, producing substances such as lactic acid, nitric
- oxide, polyamines, estrogen, serotonin, and many more specific mediators. But paying attention to the
- physical factors involved in a stress reaction is important, if we are to see the organism integrally,
- rather than as a collection of "specific biological mechanisms," involving things like the pixie-powered
- "membrane pumps."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When a cell shrinks under hyperosmolar conditions, its metabolism becomes catabolic, breaking down proteins
- and glycogen, and sometimes producing lactic acid, which results in an alkaline shift, increasing the cell's
- affinity for water, and causing it to return to normal size. A slight degree of hyperosmolarity increases
- the cell's metabolic rate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Swelling in hypo-osmolar conditions, i.e,, with an excess of water, is anabolic, leading to cellular
- proliferation, and inhibiting the breakdown of protein and glycogen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Respiring cells are always producing some water, by transferring hydrogen from fuel molecules to oxygen.
- Respiration also produces carbon dioxide, which in itself is a Lewis acid (meaning that it binds electrons,
- rather than releasing protons), that associates with cellular proteins, acidifying them in the process. A
- large amount of carbon dioxide can exist inside cells in the bound form. Acidified cytoplasm (like any other
- mostly acidic polymer-gel) releases water and sodium. (This process is physically analogous to the process
- of flushing a water softener with salt, or a demineralizer with acid, to reactivate it.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides binding with the cytoplasm, the carbon dioxide can be changed into carbonic acid, by chemically
- combining with water. Carbonic acid is hydrophilic, and so it quickly leaves the cell, taking with it some
- of the oppositely charged ions, such as calcium and sodium. The formation of carbonic acid, which is
- constantly streaming out of the respiring cell, causes some water and some positively ionized metals to
- leave the cell, in an "active" process, that doesn't require any mysterious pumps.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- As the blood passes through the lungs, carbon dioxide leaves the system, and as carbonic acid is converted
- to carbon dioxide, water is left behind in the blood, along with the counterions (of alkaline metals or
- earths), accounting for slight differences in pH and osmolarity between the bloodstream and the tissue
- cells. Some experiments suggest that the normal osmolarity of various tissues is 2 or 3 times higher than
- that of the blood, which is called "isosmolar" or isotonic.
- </p>
- <p>
- The kidneys adjust the osmolarity of the blood by allowing water and solutes to leave the bloodstream, in
- proportions that usually keep the body fluids in balance with cells. The kidneys are able to compensate for
- many of the imbalances produced by stress and inappropriate diets, for example by forming ammonia and carbon
- dioxide, to compensate for imbalances in the alkalis and acids that are being delivered to the blood by
- other organs. Because of the kidneys' great ability to regulate the flow of solutes between the blood and
- the forming urine, the "membrane pumps" have great importance for medical nephrologists. But the more
- extreme the "active transport" is, the more obvious it becomes that processes other than "membrane pumps"
- are responsible.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Some lizards and sea birds have glands near their noses that are called salt glands, because of their
- ability to secrete salt. The salt gland is probably the most extreme case of active transport, but its
- physiology is very similar to the physiology of any other secretory gland or membrane, such as tear glands
- and sweat glands. The mechanism of salt excretion in these glands should really settle the issue of how
- active transport works, but most nephrologists, oculists, and medical researchers in general aren't
- interested in salt glands.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carbon dioxide is the driving force in the salt gland. The constant formation of CO2, and its loss into the
- air, allows a high concentration of salt to be excreted. Blocking the interchange of CO2 and carbonic acid,
- with acetazolamide, or inhibiting the formation of CO2, prevents the excretion of salt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Since respiratory metabolism, governed by the thyroid hormone, is our main source of carbon dioxide, it's
- obvious that thyroid deficiency should impair our ability to regulate water and solutes, such as salt. An
- organism that illustrates this function of thyroid is the young salmon, when it leaves a freshwater river to
- begin its life in the ocean. As it converts its physiology to tolerate the salty environment, its thyroid
- hormone surges. When it's mature, and returns to the fresh water to spawn, its prolactin rises sharply. In
- experiments with rodents, it has been found that drinking a large amount of water increases their prolactin,
- but the same amount of water, with added salt, doesn't.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hypothyroidism is typically associated with increased prolactin secretion. Hypothyroid people typically
- retain water, while losing salt, so the hypothyroid state is analogous to the salmon that has returned to
- the river, and to the mice that drink too much salt-free water.
- </p>
- <p>
- The typical hypothyroid person loses salt rapidly in the urine (and probably in the sweat, too, though that
- is usually diagnosed as cystic fibrosis), and retains water, diluting the urine less than normal. The
- reduced production of carbon dioxide, with increased susceptibility to producing lactate and ammonium,
- causes the cells to be more alkaline than normal, increasing their affinity for water. The rise of estrogen
- that usually accompanies hypothyroidism also increases intracellular pH, loss of sodium, and over-hydration
- of the blood.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Hypothyroid muscles typically retain excess water, and fatigue easily, taking up more water than normal
- during exertion. In childhood, mild hypothyroidism often causes the leg muscles to swell and ache in the
- evenings, with what have been called "growing pains." When the problem is more extreme, all the skeletal
- muscles can become very large (Hoffman syndrome), because of the anabolic effect of over-hydration.
- Enlargement of any muscle can result from the excessive hydration produced by thyroid deficiency, but when
- it happens to the muscles behind the eyes (Itabashi, et al., 1988), it often leads to a diagnosis of
- hyperthyroidism, rather than hypothyroidism.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little kids with the Hoffman syndrome don't have the bloated myxedematous appearance that's often
- associated with hypothyroidism. They look athletic to a ridiculous degree, like miniature body-builders. But
- after a few weeks of treatment with thyroid, they regain the slender appearance that's normal for their age.
- The swollen state actually supports enlargement of the muscle, and the cellular processes are probably
- closely related to the muscle swelling and growth produced by exercise. The growth of the muscle cell during
- swelling seems to be the result of normal repair processes, in a context of reduced turnover of cellular
- proteins.
- </p>
- <p>
- The people who believe in membrane pumps that maintain normal solute distributions by active transport know
- that the pumps would require energy (far more than the cell can produce, but they don't confront that
- issue), and so their view requires that they assign a great part of the cell's resources just to maintaining
- ionic homeostasis, and the result of that is that they tend to neglect the actual energy economy of the
- cell, which is primarily devoted to the adaptive renewal of the cell structure and enzyme systems, not to
- driving the systems that don't exist.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The "anabolic" balance of the swollen cell is the result of decreased turnover of the cell's components. The
- higher rate of metabolism produced by adequate thyroid function maintains a high rate of renewal of the
- cell's systems, keeping the cell constantly adjusted to slight changes in the organism's needs. The evidence
- of a high rate of bone turnover is sometimes taken as evidence that thyroid can cause osteoporosis.
- </p>
- <p>
- Later, in a more mature person, chronically fatigued and painful muscles that at one time would have been
- diagnosed as rheumatism, may be diagnosed as fibromyalgia. Most doctors are reluctant to prescribe thyroid
- supplements for the problem, but the association of elevated prolactin with the muscle disorder is now
- generally recognized.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hypo-osmolar blood of hypothyroidism, increasing the excitability of vascular endothelium and smooth
- muscle, is probably a mechanism contributing to the high blood pressure of hypothyroidism. The swelling
- produced in vascular endothelium by hypo-osmotic plasma causes these cells to take up fats, contributing to
- the development of atherosclerosis. The generalized leakiness affects all cells (see "Leakiness"
- newsletter), and can contribute to reduced blood volume, and problems such as orthostatic hypotension. The
- swollen endothelium is stickier, and this is suspected to support the metastasis of cancer cells.
- Inflammation-related proteins, including CRP, are increased by the hypothyroid hyperhydration. The heart
- muscle itself can swell, leading to congestive heart failure.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Some of the nerve problems associated with hypothyroidism (e.g., carpal tunnel syndrome and "foot drop") are
- blamed on compression of the nerves, from swelling of surrounding tissues, but the evidence is clear that
- hypothyroidism causes swelling in the nerve cells themselves. For example, in hypothyroidism, nerves are
- slow to respond to stimulation, and their conduction of the impulse is slow. These changes are the same as
- those produced by hyper-hydration caused by other means. Hypothyroid nerves are easily fatigued, and
- fatigued nerves take up a large amount of water. Swelling of the spinal cord is probably responsible for the
- "spinal stenosis" commonly seen in domestic animals and people; the mobility of intracellular water
- molecules is distinctly increased in patients with compression of the spinal cord (Tsuchiya, et al., 2003;
- Ries, et al., 2001).
- </p>
- <p>
- The hyperhydration of hypothyroidism has been known to cause swelling and softening of cartilage, with
- deformation of joints, but somehow it has never dawned on surgeons that this process would lead to
- deformation of intervertebral disks.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has been known for a long time that hyperhydration can produce seizures<strong>;</strong>
- at one time, neurologists would test for epilepsy by having the patient drink a pint of water. Although
- there are many reasons to think that the hyperhydration produced by hypothyroidism is a factor in epilepsy,
- physicians have been very reluctant to consider the possibility, because they generally think of thyroid
- hormone as a stimulant, and believe that "stimulants" are necessarily inappropriate for people with
- epilepsy.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- While it's true that the thyroid hormone increases sensitivity to adrenaline, its most noticeable effect is
- in improving the ability to relax, including the ability to sleep soundly and restfully. And it happens that
- increasing norepinephrine (the brain's locally produced form of adrenaline) helps to prevent seizures
- (Giorgi, et al., 2004).
- </p>
- <p>
- Cell swelling increases the sensitivity of nerves, and hyperosmotic shrinkage lowers their sensitivity.
- Increasing carbon dioxide helps to reduce the hydration of tissue (for example, the hydration and thickness
- of the cornea are decreased when carbon dioxide is increased), and increasing carbon dioxide is known to
- inhibit epileptic seizures. Another diagnostic trick of neurologists was to have the patient hyperventilate;
- it would often bring on a seizure. The diuretic acetazolamide, which increases the body's carbon dioxide and
- reduces water retention, is very effective for preventing seizures.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sleep-inducing effect of salty food is probably related to the anti-excitatory effects of
- hyperosmolarity, of adequate thyroid function, and of carbon dioxide.
- </p>
- <p>
- Degenerative diseases, especially cancer, heart disease, and brain diseases, are less prevalent in
- populations that live at a high altitude. When oxygen pressure is low, the lungs lose carbon dioxide more
- slowly, and so the amount of carbon dioxide retained in the body is greater. If the basic problem in
- hypothyroidism is the deficient production of carbon dioxide causing excessive loss of salt and retention of
- water, resulting in hypo-osmotic body fluids, then we would expect people at high altitude to have better
- retention of salt, more loss of water, and more hypertonic body fluids. That has been observed in many
- studies. The increased rate of metabolism at altitude would be consistent with the relatively active
- "catabolism" of the slightly hyperosmotic condition.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- After the drug companies began, in the late 1950s, marketing some newly discovered (thiazide) diuretics,
- which cause sodium to be lost in the urine, their advertising campaigns created a cultish belief that salt
- caused hypertension. They convinced a whole generation of physicians that pregnant women should limit salt
- in their diet, take a diuretic preventively, and restrict calories to prevent "excessive" weight gain.
- Millions of women and their babies were harmed by that cult.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pre-eclampsia and pregnancy toxemia have been corrected (Shanklin and Hodin, 1979) by both increased dietary
- protein and increased salt, which improve circulation, lower blood pressure, and prevent seizures, while
- reducing vascular leakiness. The effectiveness of increased salt in pre-eclampsia led me to suggest it for
- women with premenstrual edema, because both conditions typically involve high estrogen, hyponatremia, and a
- tendency toward hypo-osmolarity. Estrogen itself causes sodium loss, reduced osmolarity, and increased
- capillary leakiness. Combined with a high protein diet, eating a little extra salt usually helps to correct
- a variety of problems involving edema, poor circulation, and high blood pressure.
- </p>
- <p>
- The danger of salt restriction in pregnancy has hardly been recognized by most physicians, and its danger in
- analogous physiological situations is much farther from their consideration.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the things that happen when there isn't enough sodium in the diet is that more aldosterone is
- synthesized. Aldosterone causes less sodium to be lost in the urine and sweat, but it achieves that at the
- expense of the increased loss of potassium, magnesium, and probably calcium. The loss of potassium leads to
- vasoconstriction, which contributes to heart and kidney failure and high blood pressure. The loss of
- magnesium contributes to vasoconstriction, inflammation, and bone loss. Magnesium deficiency is extremely
- common, but a little extra salt in the diet makes it easier to retain the magnesium in our foods.
- </p>
- <p>
- Darkness and hypothyroidism both reduce the activity of cytochrome oxidase, making cells more susceptible to
- stress. A promoter of excitotoxicity, ouabain, or a lack of salt, can function as the equivalent of
- darkness, in resetting the biological rhythms (Zatz, 1989, 1991).
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Bone loss occurs almost entirely during the night, and the nocturnal rise in cortisol and prolactin has
- strongly catabolic effects, but many other pro-inflammatory substances also rise during the night, and are
- probably the basic cause of the increased catabolism. Increased salt in the diet appears to improve some
- aspects of calcium metabolism, such as reducing parathyroid hormone and increasing ionized calcium, when the
- diet is deficient in calcium (Tordoff, 1997).
- </p>
- <p>
- The kidneys can produce large amounts of carbon dioxide and ammonia, in the process of preventing the loss
- of electrolytes, while allowing acid to be lost in the urine. The ammonia is produced by the breakdown of
- protein. During stress or fasting, the loss of tissue protein can be minimized by supplementing the
- minerals, potassium, sodium, magnesium, and calcium. Salt restriction can cause aldosterone to increase, and
- excess aldosterone causes potassium loss, and increases the use of protein to form ammonia (Norby, et al.,
- 1976; Snart and Taylor, 1978; Welbourne and Francoeur, 1977).
- </p>
- <p>
- Aldosterone secretion increases during the night, and its rise is greater in depressed and stressed people.
- It inhibits energy metabolism, increases insulin resistance, and increases the formation of proinflammatory
- substances in fat cells (Kraus, et al., 2005). During aging, salt restriction can produce an exaggerated
- nocturnal rise in aldosterone.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the night, there are many changes that suggest that the thyroid functions are being blocked, for
- example a surge in the thyroid stimulating hormone, with T4 and T3 being lowest between 11 PM and 3 AM
- (Lucke, et al., 1977), while temperature and energy production are at their lowest. This suggests that the
- problems of hypothyroidism will be most noticeable during the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rheumatoid arthritis and asthma are two inflammatory conditions that are notoriously worse during the night.
- Melatonin has been reported to be higher in patients with severe asthma and rheumatoid arthritis, and to
- promote the secretion of a variety of other pro-inflammatory substances. The peak of melatonin secretion is
- followed by the peak of aldosterone, and a little later by the peak of cortisol.
- </p>
- <p>
- The use of bright light (which suppresses melatonin) to treat depression probably helps to inhibit the
- production of aldosterone, which is strongly associated with depression.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Both aldosterone and melatonin can contribute to the contraction of smooth muscle in blood vessels.
- Constriction of blood vessels in the kidneys helps to conserve water, which is adaptive if blood volume has
- been reduced because of a sodium deficiency. When blood vessels are inappropriately constricted, the blood
- pressure rises, while organs don't receive as much blood circulation as they need. This impaired circulation
- seems to be what causes the kidney damage associated with high blood pressure, which can eventually lead to
- heart failure and multiple organ failure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Progesterone, which helps to maintain blood volume (partly by preventing vascular leakiness, preventing
- excessive sodium loss and by supporting albumin synthesis) antagonizes aldosterone. Aldosterone antagonists
- are now being recognized as effective treatments for hypertension, water retention, congestive heart
- failure, arrhythmia, diabetes, kidney disease, and a great variety of inflammatory problems. (Synthetic
- drugs to antagonize aldosterone are most effective when they are most like natural progesterone.) Since
- aldosterone contributes to fibrosis of the heart and kidneys (nephrosclerosis), progesterone, the
- "antifibromatogenic steroid," should be helpful for those problems that have been considered irreversible.
- Aldosterone appears to contribute to the hyperglycemia of diabetes itself, and not just to its
- complications, by interfering with the interactions of insulin and cortisol (Yamashita, et al., 2004).
- </p>
- <p>
- One of progesterone's fundamental actions is to cause estrogen "receptors" to disintegrate; hypertonicity
- has this effect in some situations. Estrogen's effects are largely produced by increased tissue hydration.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Aldosterone causes cells to take up sodium, while increasing their pH, i.e., raising their alkalinity
- (Mihailidou and Funder, 2005). Intracellular sodium has long been known to be a factor, along with swelling
- and alkalinity, in stimulating cell division (Cone and Tongier, 1971). A lack of salt stimulates the
- formation of serotonin, which in turn stimulates aldosterone synthesis--that is, a sodium restricted diet
- activates processes that cause cells to take up sodium inappropriately, in a situation reminiscent of the
- calcium deficient diet causing inappropriate calcification.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aldosterone, like stress or hypo-osmolarity, activates the enzyme (ODC) which produces the polyamines, that
- promote cell division, and that can probably account for some of the harmful effects of excessive
- aldosterone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Eating salty food around bedtime usually has a sleep-inducing effect, and it helps to maintain blood volume
- (which tends to decrease during the night), and to restrain the nocturnal rise of aldosterone, and other
- indicators of stress or inflammation. Eating gelatin, which lacks tryptophan, will reduce the formation of
- serotonin, and is likely to limit the formation of aldosterone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pregnenolone can sometimes very quickly allow swollen tissues to release their water. This function is
- probably closely related to its antifibromatogenic function, since swelling and leaking set the stage for
- fibrosis.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hyperosmotic sodium chloride solutions (e.g., 7.5%) are being used more often for treating trauma and shock,
- because the concentrated solution increases blood volume by removing water from the extravascular spaces,
- unlike the "isotonic" saline (0.9% sodium chloride), which usually adds to the edema by leaking out of the
- blood vessels.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- A 5% sodium chloride solution is effective for promoting healing of damaged corneas, and solutions of 5% to
- 10% sodium chloride are effective for accelerating the healing of wounds and ulcers. Other hypertonic
- solutions, for example glucose or urea, have been used therapeutically, but sodium chloride seems to be the
- most effective in a variety of situations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thyroid hormone, by maintaining oxidative metabolism with the production of carbon dioxide, is highly
- protective against excessive water retention and loss of sodium and magnesium.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sometimes doctors recommend that constipated people should drink extra water, "to soften the stool." The
- colon is where water is removed from the intestinal contents, and when it is inflamed, it removes too much
- water. Several decades ago, it was recognized (Orr, et al., 1931) that hypertonic saline, given
- intravenously, would stimulate intestinal peristalsis, and could be used to treat paralytic ileus and
- intestinal obstruction.
- </p>
- <p>
- When water is taken orally, it is absorbed high in the intestine, long before it reaches the colon, so the
- recommendation to drink water for constipation can produce a situation that's the opposite of intravenous
- hypertonic saline, by diluting the blood. Using a hypertonic salt solution as an enema can have the same
- beneficial effect on the intestine as the intravenous treatment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Constipation physiology is probably analogous to the physiology of congestive heart failure, in which
- muscles are weakened and fatigued by swelling.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In recent decades, the prevalence of congestive heart failure has increased tremendously, so that it is now
- often called an epidemic. Hyponatremia (too little salt, or too much water) is a recognized "risk factor"
- for congestive heart failure. In the failing heart, the muscle cells are swollen, causing the heart wall to
- stiffen, weakening its ability to pump. Osmotically shrinking the cells can restore their function.
- </p>
- <p>
- The swollen heart, like any muscle, loses the ability to quickly and completely relax, and so it doesn't
- fill adequately between contractions. Elastic tissues, such as arteries and lungs, stiffen when they are
- over-hydrated, losing their normal functions. In small blood vessels, swelling narrows the channel,
- increasing resistance to the flow of blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- When people force themselves to drink a certain amount of water every day, even when they don't feel
- thirsty, they are activating complex adaptive processes unnecessarily. Thirst is the best guide to the
- amount of fluid needed.
- </p>
- <p>
- When extra water consumption is combined with a low salt diet--as physicians have so often recommended--a
- healthy person can adapt easily, but for a hypothyroid person it can have disastrous effects.
- </p>
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- Am J Physiol. 1991 Dec;261(6 Pt 2):R1424-30. <strong>Low salt mimics effects of dark pulses on circadian
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- </p>
- <p>
- Brain Res. 1989 Oct 30;501(1):37-45. <strong>
- Ouabain (or salt solution lacking potassium) mimics the effects of dark pulses on the circadian
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- Zatz M, Mullen DA.
- </p>
-
- © Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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