Essayer OR - Gratuit
Getting salty over health
The Light
|Issue 34: June 2023
Body's chemical reactions are giving clues to fighting disease
WHEN we think of their health, we are told that too much salt is bad for us. What is 'too much' exactly, and are there any health benefits of a reasonable salt intake?
Table salt, also known as sodium chloride, is consumed the world over in vast quantities. Take Japan, for example, where an individual consumes on average 11.7 grams per day; in the U.S. 9.6 grams and in the UK, 8.6 grams respectively. The recommended salt intake is six grams per day, which is less than what is added to a white loaf of bread; a brown loaf tends to have double that quantity.
Salt has been linked to high blood pressure, known as hypertension, but yet if we look at Japan - where there is an average life expectancy of 85 years - it is ranked way down at 183 in the world for hypertension. The UK and U.S. have significantly higher death rates attributed to hypertension, and so we should question the validity of salt being a cause.
Salt is absolutely vital for the body's processes. In fact, it is essential for the functioning of our nervous system, for controlling fluid balance, and for our muscles to operate. Excess salt is passed from our bodies by urination and sweating. It is also why we get thirsty when we have eaten something salty.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Issue 34: June 2023 de The Light.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Light
The Light
You can't handle the truth!
Met office caught deleting inconvenient data
2 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Privacy ends in name of protection
Proposed law invites future where every device is spied on
3 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Profiteers from genocide
Hunger strike exposes lack of due process in Britain
3 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Involuntary slaughter?
Family-testimony book exposes 'silent killing'
2 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Sex, lies and videotape
Epstein blueprint for compromising political leaders
3 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Two deaths of Bin Laden
On May 2, 2011, the world was told that Osama bin Laden had been hunted down and killed in Pakistan by the elite U.S. Navy SEAL Team Six.
4 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Digital currency's silver lining
Precious metal could help spark a silent revolution
4 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Narcissism normalised in politics
Corporate control of party-based politics breeding creeping culture of self-entitlement
4 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Humans redundant in tech takeover
THE disruptions we have seen in recent years are frequently presented as a chaotic sequence of events: a 'pandemic', inflation, energy shortages and war.
4 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
The Light
Green energy bubble will pop
Taxpayers footing bill for speculation on renewables
3 mins
Issue 65, January/February 2026
Translate
Change font size

