How much sodium do you have each day? Help please
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I have friends with high blood pressure that limit sodium to under 1,500 daily. But I do cycling and running and I sweat profusely so I add extra sodium on intense exercise days to make up for what I lose in sweat. I get very dehydrated on long rides and runs and the extra sodium in exercise drinks encourages me to drink more liquid, which I very much need to do. So the RDA is essentially meaningless for either end of the spectrum. Sedentary people probably need far less sodium than the RDA but highly active outdoorsy folk may find it necessary to add sodium to their diet.0
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Sorry everyone my diary is open now I must of had it friends only0
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I don't get enough sodium most days, but I have a severe potassium deficiency, so it actually balances out pretty well (other than the whole occasionally passing out thing).
I tend to get between 1200-1400 mg/day on average.
If I do vigorous exercise, I *have* to get closer to 2000 mg.
Sodium is not good in excess, but it is important nonetheless.0 -
I started watching the sodium because when I first joined I was losing weight but feeling bloated so my daughter told me to watch the sodium so now I stay under what they recommend with only going over on occasions. If I do eat something high in sodium for lunch I try extra hard to be more careful at dinner so that I don't go over. I feel better by watching the sodium that is for sure0
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Where do they indicate sodium intake??? I missed that??0
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I have to have between 2,000 and 3,500 mg sodium per day to keep my blood pressure up. I'm naturally hypotensive and my heart meds make it even worse. Higher sodium intake helps balance it out.0
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Your picture is hysterical!!!:laugh:0
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I had 3200mg yesterday - unsure how that happens. I am good until lunch and then it explodes. It absolutely adds to bloat.0
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I don't track it, 3 nutrients to manage + some micros is enough.
Why do you guys track it ?
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The American Heart *kitten*. says 1000mg of sodium a day.0
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I usually try to stay under 2500 but if it doesn't it doesn't. I just chug some extra water.0
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i drink plenty of water, Besides i have lost 50 pounds not worrying about sodium,sometimes i'm low most of the times i'm high0
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Good post, thanks for that.0 -
I try and keep it under 2,500. On average it's usually under 2000 and some days under 1000.0
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Concerns about high blood pressure were what originally got me on the kick about getting healthy - so I track it to make sure I stay on course. I don't worry if I'm a little over here and there because the average is under - but the BP is why I track it - not to do with losing weight per se.0
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While I know that the FDA generally recommends everyone stay under 1800, when I try to drop my sodium/salt that far, I actually get sick. My BP bottoms out, I get BAD muscle spasms, and I'm miserable. People repeatedly told me that it could be accounting for my weight retention, but I found that when I cut it out, I gained back weight as well.
I think it's really individual and depends on your body. If you feel bloated or you eat a lot of processed foods and stuff, then I'd look into it. However, it's one area where I let my body tell me, and I find that since I stopped tracking it (it's really hard to stay under 2500mg when you have to eat over 3k a day) I felt a lot better.
I concentrate more on sugars than anything, because they easily get out of control, and are what impacts insulin levels.0 -
No point tracking sodium, any "weight" it causes you to gain is just water. Unless you have an unusually high sodium day before weigh in it isn't going to make any difference.
That's fine if you are only on here to lose weight. For me and lots of others it's very much about optimising our health. I use all the nutritional breakdown to make sure everything's as good as I can realistically get it.0 -
I try to have no more than 1200 mg daily....0
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No point tracking sodium, any "weight" it causes you to gain is just water. Unless you have an unusually high sodium day before weigh in it isn't going to make any difference.
That's fine if you are only on here to lose weight. For me and lots of others it's very much about optimising our health. I use all the nutritional breakdown to make sure everything's as good as I can realistically get it.
exactly0 -
While I know that the FDA generally recommends everyone stay under 1800, when I try to drop my sodium/salt that far, I actually get sick. My BP bottoms out, I get BAD muscle spasms, and I'm miserable. People repeatedly told me that it could be accounting for my weight retention, but I found that when I cut it out, I gained back weight as well.
I think it's really individual and depends on your body. If you feel bloated or you eat a lot of processed foods and stuff, then I'd look into it. However, it's one area where I let my body tell me, and I find that since I stopped tracking it (it's really hard to stay under 2500mg when you have to eat over 3k a day) I felt a lot better.
I concentrate more on sugars than anything, because they easily get out of control, and are what impacts insulin levels.
EXACT same thing was happening to me. Turns out I'm hypotensive (exact opposite of hypertensive).
FWIW, protein also induces insulin spikes. Unless you're diabetic or eating chocolate all day every day, don't worry about the sugar either. Just focus on calories and eating as much whole quality food as you can.0 -
Can someone check out my diary to see how I am doing..Please be somewhat nice I am learning0
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Your diary looks pretty good on the whole, and your sodium levels aren't all that high.
If you're concerned about just cut back on processed stuff - weightwatchers products, highly processed cheese etc. You could also have whole eggs which are nutritionally very good instead of egg beaters (which I've only come across since using this site, I don't think we have this product in the UK. Euuugh!)0 -
No point tracking sodium, any "weight" it causes you to gain is just water. Unless you have an unusually high sodium day before weigh in it isn't going to make any difference.
That's fine if you are only on here to lose weight. For me and lots of others it's very much about optimising our health. I use all the nutritional breakdown to make sure everything's as good as I can realistically get it.
exactly
I'm totally not bothered about health I guess
*lights cigarette, swigs gin*0 -
Can someone check out my diary to see how I am doing..Please be somewhat nice I am learning
Overall looks okay, but you're only netting about 1,000 calories per day. I'd suggest increasing your calorie intake by about 200 calories. You're burning 600-800 calories in workouts on a regular basis. Otherwise, it's looks great. Good job!0 -
Your diary looks pretty good on the whole, and your sodium levels aren't all that high.
If you're concerned about just cut back on processed stuff - weightwatchers products, highly processed cheese etc. You could also have whole eggs which are nutritionally very good instead of egg beaters (which I've only come across since using this site, I don't think we have this product in the UK. Euuugh!)
The weight watchers food are recipes I have entered not the frozen kind 95% of the time...and ok about the eggs! I was actually going to eat a hard boiled egg later0 -
Thanks for the help everyone so far!0
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I don't add salt to anything. I literally haven't picked up the salt shaker in months, which is saying something for someone who loves salty food, and I still end up over my sodium limit on a lot of days. I've started taking a potassium supplement, and my BP is very good, but I still need to cut the sodium some more.0
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If you're only here to lose weight it doesn't matter very much. An abundance of sodium in your diet may cause you to retain water but even if you're constantly retaining (say) 5lbs of water, that 5lbs of water is going to be consistent whether you're losing fat or not. So when you're losing weight, you're losing weight regardless of water retention.
That said... I do not care about my sodium intake because I don't usually eat food from a can or a package.0 -
Mine is usually 600 - 1000 a day. I try to eat clean as much as poss and avoid tins/packets I cook everything from scratch.0
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So the thing about sodium is this: the amount you should consume depends on how physical you are in the day.
Athletes actually drink more sodium-rich drinks like Gatorade because sweating depletes salt from the body (yes, we all need salt in healthy amounts). If you're active (60 minutes of exercise a day), it's okay to go a little over MFP daily sodium recommendations. If you're not active, it really is a good idea to find ways to limit your sodium to the daily amount on this site.0
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