Thursday, 14 February 2013

Potassium - next in the list of components involved in a possible 'electrolyte crisis'


Health Warning: Please do not start taking Potassium unless you have permission from your physician.  This is a powerful nutritional supplement that can interfere with heart medication, among other things, and should be administered with caution!


Why I'm now taking Potassium

If you recall, when I began my research into the possible causes of migraine, I learned from general searching on YouTube (paraphrased, as exact reference has been mislaid) that migraine could have its origins in what is referred to as 'an electrolyte crisis', that starts elsewhere in the body, possibly the kidneys or liver'.  

Since finding this out, I've come across other references to migraine being described as 'an electrical storm' or 'nerve storm', with frequent comparison to Epilepsy.

Its also worth mentioning at this point, that as far as can tell, you can be Epileptic and suffer from migraine, but migraine does not eventually turn into Epilepsy.

So with this idea of 'electrical storm' aka electrolyte crisis in mind, I decided to look at each of the components involved in the Electrolysis process listed here, with thanks to Wikipedia:


In physiology, the primary ions of electrolytes are sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), calcium (Ca2+), magnesium (Mg2+), chloride (Cl), hydrogen phosphate (HPO42−), and hydrogen carbonate (HCO3). The electric charge symbols of plus (+) and minus (−) indicate that the substance is ionic in nature and has an imbalanced distribution of electrons, the result of chemical dissociation. Sodium is the main electrolyte found in extracellular fluid and is involved in fluid balance and blood 
pressure control.


After reading that entry, I decided to read some more on the subject and downloaded another neat Kindle e-book, this time by Rudy Silva, a Nutritional Practitioner called:



I found this book to be very informative and highlighted lots of passages as I went through it.
  
Here are some cogent quotations (with permission from the author) that I think are particularly pertinent to my research:


The references to Iodine, liver function and headaches are particularly germane.  

So, after several months of receiving the continued benefits  of Magnesium,  I've decided to try Potassium supplements now, because I would really like to explore a chemical basis for my migraines.  

Besides, I get the feeling that if I went to see a specialist, he/she would no doubt start me on all the obvious 'equalisers', which I understand these vital minerals to be.

I bought my bottle of Postassium tablets at Holland & Barrett, (as they were having a sale) at the weekend.  Each tablet has 99mg of Potassium Gluconate and some magnesium, as well as bulking agent.  The bottle recommends you take 4 tablets a day, preferably with meals.   

I currently take two tablets with lunch, as well and my 2 Rhodiola Rosea capsules.


Changes I noticed since taking Potassium
After about 4 days of taking Potassium I started to notice a 'strange' but positive change in my general sense of well being.  It took me a while to exactly identify how I was feeling better, as the effect is quite subtle (as compared to say Rhodiola), but unmistakable all the same.    

Its difficult to describe precisely the effect its  having on me, but I think I could sum it by saying, overall, I feel strangely 'refreshed', calmer and somehow more at ease??  

This is very noteworthy, especially as I've managed to achieve this while still under considerable stress.  

I suppose another way I could put it, is that I feel a lot better, in a relatively short space of time, whereas usually I would expect to feel as 'recovered' as this after several weeks??

The other thing I noticed, is that I have absolutely no residual neck pain left from my last headache.  I put this down to Potassium helping Magnesium to work better.  I think this approach definitely feels better than my taking maximum doses of Magnesium, as I was having 'bowel side effects' from that.  

I should also mention that just before I started taking Potassium, I halved my dose of magnesium, back down to 2 tablets, taken with B6.

(I'm not entirely sure, but I think because Potassium interacts closely with Iodine, and as I'm Hypothyroidism, maybe this could be part of the benefit I'm deriving from taking it??)    

Dog progress

I'm so pleased to report that our darling dog's general demeanour is about a hundred times better than he was before his seizure!  

Its such a relief to us and appears to me, almost as if nature had administered its own form of ECT to our troubled little fellow, and thereby corrected so much of his distress.  

- You know, I can't help wondering if the dog had a blood clot in his brain (that had travelled from the site of his emergency castration) and that has finally been reabsorbed by neighbouring structures, or something like that??  As I understand it, something like that usually takes about 3 months on medication, but as he was not on blood thinning medication, I wonder if it could have taken 12 months?  We're just totally relieved at his improvement, as you can imagine.  

No comments:

Post a Comment

Hi thanks for commenting on my blog posts. The internet is a dangerous place, so I hope you dont mind but I have to check you're not a hater first - thank you!