UnderTheRadar
CH.com Old Timer
  
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Literally
Posts: 383
Texas
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Margie, I'm glad you have found something that works for you, but without scientific data to back up your dosage advice, I felt it would be best to find some scientific research to make sure everyone who reads your posts gets all the facts.
In your post from 2006, you say: "take one gram of Vitamin C and 1 gram of sea salt (1/4tsp) for each 15 pounds of body weight. So if you weigh 150 lbs. you take 10 grams of each per day." Here is some data from FACTA UNIVERSITATIS: "The toxic oral dose of salt is 0.5-1 g/kg of body weight, whereas the fatal dose amounts to about 1-3 g/kg of body weight, depending on the age, gender, general health state, and other individual characteristics" Lidija Kostić-Banović, Institute for Forensic Medicine. [i]Medicine and Biology Vol.12, No 3, 2005, pp. 146 - 149.[/i] Also, "Ingestion of large amounts of salt in a short time (about 1 g per kg of body weight) can be fatal. Salt solutions have been used in ancient China as a method of suicide. Deaths have also resulted from attempted use of salt solutions as emetics, forced salt intake, and accidental confusion of salt with sugar in child food." Elisabeth Elena Türk. Fatal hypernatremia after using salt as an emetic—report of three autopsy cases. Legal Medicine 2005, 7, 47-50.
And according to the Journal of Internal Medecine, "It has been well documented that as little as two tablespoons of salt (30g) can rapidly elevate serum sodium concentration by as much as 30 mEq, depending on body weight. Such rapid elevation of sodium levels can result in serious neurological consequences." Y. OFRAN, Department of Medicine,Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem,[i]Journal of Internal Medicine 2004; 256: 525–528[/i] From the same article: "Seventeen cases of severe hypernatraemia secondary to oral administration of sodium are depicted in Table 1":
Table 1 Characteristics of cases of salt poisoning Sex Age Amount ingested Outcome F 20 <1000 g Died F 21 300–600 g Died F 48 20 g Died F 35 60 g Died F 54 Unknown Died F 36 1000 g Died F 23 Unknown Died F 35 78 g Died F 56 100 g Died F 27 <1000 g Died F 26 150 g Died M 41 70 g Died F 85 Unknown Survived F 45 80 g Died F 19 Unknown Died
Also, you made this completely un-backed up claim: "for all the parents whose kids have been diagnosed with CH....I would reallyresearch Lyme disease and yes there are parents giving their toddlers the salt/c..so it is very safe" I am a mom, and it frightens me that this kind of hearsay is being disseminated on the internet for desperate parents grasping at straws. Children's kidneys cannot process excess sodium as efficiently as adult kidneys, which puts them at much higher risk for serious medical problems, especially if they are being administered this remedy without a doctor's care. Again from FACTA UNIVERSITATIS: "Due to excessive salt intake, hypernatremia is far more common in young babies and children. In autopsy findings of fatal sodium chloride poisoning cases, brain edema, venous and capillary congestion, cortical venous thromboses and venous brain infarcts are predominant. Demyelination, which covers a wide area of the thalamus, basal ganglia, external capsulesand cerebral vermis, has been described in literature in cases of three deceased children, whose hypernatremia was aggressively treated." (ibid.) These children all died within three hours-two days of being taken to the emergency room. There's even a few cases of child death by sodium poisoning in the news right now- just google it and you'll find several. Maybe I'm overreacting, but I think it's one thing to talk about a treatment that's working for you, and another thing entirely to give out dosages and say it's safe for children without any proof.
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