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Salt

A friend of mine who used to use a lot of salt and who at 74 was always full of energy decided that salt was bad for her and cut it out completely, carefully looking at everything she ate - bread for instance. After a few months of this she collapsed and was rushed into hospital and nearly died. She is now recovering but should of course have reduced her salt intake gradually.
 
Dying of eating salt, through dehydration and thereby death of your cells is due to osmosis; [SIZE=-1]the movement of water molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.[/SIZE]

Water will pass from within the cells, into the bloodstream, if there is more salt in the bloodstream, than in the cells. This works in reverse too, if there is too much salt in the cells / too little salt in the blood, water will pass into the cells. In extreme cases the effect is, in both cases, cell death. If the water leaves the cell, the cell will dehydrate and die. If the water passes into the cell it will, unless it is a plant cell, eventually explode, also killing the cell.

Plant cells will not explode since they, contrairy to animal cells, have a cell wall that makes the cell pretty damn resilent to physical pressure.

Therefore, eating too much / little salt can kill you, and so can drinking too much / little water. (Making the, oh so fantastic, "water diet" sort of dangerous, but everyone here knows that the only real way, and the only to loose weight is "enery input< energy spending" right?, the advanced equation is btw also the only factor in loosing weight, not weird tea leaves or secret russian chemicals, well there is ephedrine/caffeine combo drugs, but they just plain suck in so many ways I don't even know where to begin.) Ok back on track :)

Diffusion doesn't work between the blood stream and the cells, therefore negating diffusion of salt. This is due to the cell membrane being permeable only to water as far as I know. Salt can, anyways, only be actively transported through the membrane.

Well, therefore, salt can kill :) 1g a day probably isn't enough tho.
 
Sooo, the water pills the doctor gives me wash salt out of my blood. Then my cells soak up more water? How come I feel more flexible on the water pills? I would think the swollen cells would be stiffer. But I am abnormal in many ways.
 
Toxic levels of sodium chloride are reported as:

From a Salt Institute site:

Oral toxicity (The Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances, 1986):

Human; TDLo: 12,357 mg/kg/23 D-C
Mouse; LD50: 4,000 mg/kg
Rat; LD50: 3,000 mg/kg
Rabbit; LDLo: 8,000 mg/kg

So, in rabbits, 4 grams per pound. In humans, 6 grams per pound, or close to one kilogram for an adult male. That's a couple bags of chips ;)
 
I'm aware that there is a lethal dose of everything. Including bricks & water. I'm thinking more of:

>6g salt daily - leads to - eventual death due to too much salt in diet

Is this based on good science? What are the risks? Is it really something to worry about? Are there contrary views in the medical community?

I'm only curious because of this article:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/medical_notes/393201.stm

Many scientists, although not all, believe this process is linked to high blood pressure, or hypertension
 
I ate a bunch of salt at once in high school on a dare. I threw up, but I'm still alive.
 

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