Salt
148 sourcesRay Peat was a strong advocate for adequate salt (sodium chloride) intake, pushing back against the widespread medical advice to restrict sodium. He argued that salt restriction activates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, raises adrenaline and cortisol, and can actually increase blood pressure in some people by triggering stress responses. He pointed to studies showing that moderate-to-high salt intake is associated with lower all-cause mortality than very low intake.
Peat recommended salting food to taste and noted that the body's craving for salt is generally a reliable guide to needs. He saw salt as supporting blood volume, kidney function, sleep quality, and overall metabolic rate. He was particularly critical of the blanket recommendation to restrict salt in hypertension, arguing that the evidence base for this was weaker than commonly assumed.
Key Positions
- Salt restriction activates stress hormones (aldosterone, adrenaline, cortisol)
- Very low salt intake is associated with higher mortality in some studies
- Adequate salt supports blood volume, kidney function, and metabolic rate
- Salt craving is generally a reliable guide to physiological needs
- Blanket sodium restriction for hypertension is based on weak evidence
- Salt helps maintain sleep quality by reducing nocturnal stress hormones
- Recommended salting food to taste rather than restricting
Sources
148 items-
Multiple Sclerosis and other hormone-related brain syndromes
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Multiple sclerosis, protein, fats, and progesterone
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Nutrition by Nature - Kate Skinner
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Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science
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Pathological Science & General Electric: Threatening the paradigm
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Peatarian Email Depository
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Phosphate, activation, and aging
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Progesterone, not estrogen, is the coronary protection factor of women.
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Protective CO2 and aging
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Protective CO2 and aging
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Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity
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Serotonin: Effects in disease, aging and inflammation
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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The Great Fish Oil Experiment
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The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)
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The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease.
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Thyroid, insomnia, and the insanities: Commonalities in disease
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Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
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Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging.
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Vashinvetala (formerly Pranarupa)
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Vegetables, etc. - Who Defines Food?
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Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging
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When energy fails: Edema, heart failure, hypertension, sarcopenia, etc.