Guest guest Posted August 4, 2005 Report Share Posted August 4, 2005 That walmart wild Alaskan salmon was so salty, I had to soak it overnight in distilled water. The water's saltiness showed me the can's label is totally errored. I gave it to the neighbor's cat. The can also appeared to have a lot more fat in it, to the point o being nauseas. Many of the meat products labels are errored, But sodium restriction is a HTN treatment, and I think now is not well studied. Long term sodium restriction causes kidney inflammation in rats. The sodium intake for HTN treatment is not well defined, ergo, has no safe limits established. Regards. Re: [ ] Re: Hypertension, prehypertension and normalBP Yes if anything lower. I was younger then.I suspect I eat too much salt via canned fish for example, like salmon. As per JW's advice I do rinse it these days though.on 8/3/2005 9:31 PM, Rodney at perspect1111@... wrote: Hi Francesca:Then perhaps BP is 'weight-sensitive' for some people and not for others?But do you remember what your systolic BP was before you started CRON - assuming that you now weigh less than you used to? We may each have a higher or lower 'curve' of BP vs. weight. But it could still be possible that each of us will experience a drop in BP with loss of weight and an increase with a rise in weight. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2005 Report Share Posted August 4, 2005 That walmart wild Alaskan salmon was so salty, I had to soak it overnight in distilled water. The water's saltiness showed me the can's label is totally errored. I gave it to the neighbor's cat. The can also appeared to have a lot more fat in it, to the point o being nauseas. Many of the meat products labels are errored, But sodium restriction is a HTN treatment, and I think now is not well studied. Long term sodium restriction causes kidney inflammation in rats. The sodium intake for HTN treatment is not well defined, ergo, has no safe limits established. Regards. Re: [ ] Re: Hypertension, prehypertension and normalBP Yes if anything lower. I was younger then.I suspect I eat too much salt via canned fish for example, like salmon. As per JW's advice I do rinse it these days though.on 8/3/2005 9:31 PM, Rodney at perspect1111@... wrote: Hi Francesca:Then perhaps BP is 'weight-sensitive' for some people and not for others?But do you remember what your systolic BP was before you started CRON - assuming that you now weigh less than you used to? We may each have a higher or lower 'curve' of BP vs. weight. But it could still be possible that each of us will experience a drop in BP with loss of weight and an increase with a rise in weight. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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