Potassium deficit
RredSonja
Posts: 307 Member
I find it pretty easy to get my nutritional needs met most days, except for potassium. I've read in various places that it's easy to get enough potassium and people don't need to supplement it it with potassium pills but should I? I know I need to get more vegis in my diet, but I despise lima beans, potatoes don't agree with me, bananas have too much sugar...anyone have any advice?
0
Replies
-
The U.S. does not require potassium on our food labels.
That is why potassium does not show up in the data base very often.
Foods with potassium: leafy greens, squash, yogurt, fish, avocados, mushrooms, beans, acorn squash, oranges, potato chips.
http://www.webmd.com/food-recipes/high-potassium-foods-topic-overview4 -
Thank you! That was driving me crazy!0
-
julierockhead wrote: »I find it pretty easy to get my nutritional needs met most days, except for potassium. I've read in various places that it's easy to get enough potassium and people don't need to supplement it it with potassium pills but should I? I know I need to get more vegis in my diet, but I despise lima beans, potatoes don't agree with me, bananas have too much sugar...anyone have any advice?
You should not supplement with potassium without the advice of a doctor, as it's quite harmful, even deadly, in overdose.
Also, as mentioned, you're probably eating a lot more than your logs suggest, and the amount your body actually needs is significantly less than the AI value of 4700 mg - the main reason for recommending so much potassium is that in some hypertensives, potassium can lower blood pressure.1 -
julierockhead wrote: »I find it pretty easy to get my nutritional needs met most days, except for potassium. I've read in various places that it's easy to get enough potassium and people don't need to supplement it it with potassium pills but should I? I know I need to get more vegis in my diet, but I despise lima beans, potatoes don't agree with me, bananas have too much sugar...anyone have any advice?
Not sure if you had the same problem, but when I was on Atkins (years ago) I used to suffer cramps in my legs/ feet which I discovered was due to a lack of potassium. I started adding Lo Salt (brand name) to food and it cleared up.0 -
I have fibromyalgia and found that potassium supplements really helped with the pain, however, I gave myself a stomach ulcer because the potassium supplements sit in the stomach to digest and burn a hole in the lining, which I found out the hard way. So I was trading one pain for another. It sucks. I was taking 1500 mg a day. Since I rarely get any at all and we need 4700 mg a day. I was careful to watch my intake because yes you can definitely OD on potassium supplements. I have yet to find a replacement for how much potassium I need to be pain free. :-(0
-
Thank you everyone. Yes I do get leg cramps! And yes indeed, potassium needs to be taken with plenty of food.0
-
Magnesium can also help with leg cramps.
80% of Americans are not meeting the daily minimum.
Potassium supplements can be extremely dangerous.
Take a multivitamin since vitamins all work together.
A multi will also have calcium
1 -
JanetYellen wrote: »Magnesium can also help with leg cramps.
80% of Americans are not meeting the daily minimum.
Potassium supplements can be extremely dangerous.
Take a multivitamin since vitamins all work together.
A multi will also have calcium
if you're going to take a multi, look for one WITHOUT iron - iron binds calcium and neither will be effectively absorbed0 -
My potassium dropped to 1.7. I had to eat potassium rich foods. I would snack on raisins,pumpkin seed, cashews and veggie soup with beans With all other things moderation is the key. I'm back to where I should be and more aware0
-
Tomatoes, avocados, raisins, and cantaloupes are high in potassium0
-
Also DONT take any multivitamins or other over the counter supplements without first talking it over with your health care provider.0
-
kimssporty wrote: »I have fibromyalgia and found that potassium supplements really helped with the pain, however, I gave myself a stomach ulcer because the potassium supplements sit in the stomach to digest and burn a hole in the lining, which I found out the hard way. So I was trading one pain for another. It sucks. I was taking 1500 mg a day. Since I rarely get any at all and we need 4700 mg a day. I was careful to watch my intake because yes you can definitely OD on potassium supplements. I have yet to find a replacement for how much potassium I need to be pain free. :-(
0 -
Don't worry about overdosing on potassium pills... at least at the drug stores and GNC's I've been to, there are no supplements that provide more than a tiny % RDV of potassium at once. If that. Most multivitamins don't have it at all. Probably because of the fact that too much at once can kill you.
I was looking for a supplement after being told to get more of it in my diet by a doctor, before I figured I'd just get it from eating more bananas, avocados, spinach, dates, and yogurt, which I already love eating.
Another 2 surprising potassium sources: super dark chocolate and molasses. I make my own chocolate by mixing baking chocolate and sugar, and wow, the pure stuff has a lot of potassium in it.
I might have a sweet tooth. Shut up.1 -
I drink low sodium V8. Loads of potassium1
-
Potassium will be on new food labels -- manufacturers will be required to use the new label by July 2018.1
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions