Time to rethink salt | Jens Titze | TEDxNashvilleSalon

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 132

  • @19993gt
    @19993gt 2 года назад +35

    My first listen was at normal speed and I was already tired. I sped it up to 1.25 and it’s perfectly digestible. 1.25 SPEED NEEDED!

    • @Niketic88
      @Niketic88 2 года назад +2

      You want make a mistake even at 1.5😅

    • @haraldtheyounger5504
      @haraldtheyounger5504 Год назад +3

      Yep, the need for speed... 1.50 or 1.75 if you can handle it. Just hit the settings button (the cog wheel) for those who don't know how to alter the speed.

    • @ivorymagnus7347
      @ivorymagnus7347 Год назад +1

      Thank you for saying this I watched before bed

    • @Yodad0110
      @Yodad0110 Год назад +1

      I tried it with 1.5speed is even better

    • @iAnon666
      @iAnon666 Год назад

      This a 2x

  • @ShoSho-cq7ct
    @ShoSho-cq7ct 3 года назад +27

    I have questions:
    why are supposedly healthy diets such as Japanese diet or Mediterranean diets high in salt? Apparently heart diseases rate is quite low in these countries?
    So is salt really that bad? What If I consume 10g salt a day, but I eat a lot of fresh food and veggies high in potassium, and do regular exercise?
    And what if I also live in a hot and humid place where I get to sweat a lot?
    Would I still be fine?

    • @phily708
      @phily708 3 года назад

      You could die from the overdoses long term and short term vomit more

    • @luxeayt6694
      @luxeayt6694 3 года назад +3

      If you need more salt due to hot weather and excersise, eat more. There is a reason runners have salt in their water when being competitive.

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 3 года назад +1

      I mean people use to ‘pickle’ aka salt many things to preserve them longer before the advent of the freezer and refrigerator.
      They would easily hit 10g per day.
      You know. With anything, listen to your body. Salt I guess is difficult because eating too much gives similar symptoms as eating too little.
      But if you’re craving more salty foods, then go for it. Just don’t force it.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 3 года назад +11

      It's not always healthy. Parts of Japan like Nagano had average of 15g of sodium per day . When the government instituted a campaign to cut salt intake, strokes also were lowered.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 3 года назад +7

      @@faramund9865 Good advice. Keep salt low in processed foods, but salt your food to taste.
      Salty food should not taste overly salty. If it tastes salty, you're taking in too much salt.
      One time I got hot on a walk here in Florida, I came in and drank a can of V-8, which has about 500mg of sodium per can. I did not even taste the salt, it just tasted sweet. When your body craves salt, you will know.

  • @Mrkevi123
    @Mrkevi123 2 года назад +56

    Salt also fights off many diseases and fights off lethargic feelings. Also, sweating during workouts means lots of salt loss. Don't avoid salt. Consume it in moderation.

    • @Trendle222
      @Trendle222 2 года назад +7

      i feel More lethargic and bloated when i have too much sodium

    • @alex3rd11
      @alex3rd11 Год назад +2

      There’s salt in almost everything we eat. It’s nearly impossible to avoid

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 Год назад +1

      @@alex3rd11 Read labels, eat whole foods, avoid sodas, learn sodium levels in different foods so you can eat as much as you want, but without the sodium. Cook from scratch at home and use spices, herbs and lemon juice, or even a dab of whole fruit jelly. You will not miss the salt. Snacks can be fruit, salads, a chicken leg, or anything you want, as long as it has no salt. Your taste will change within three days to where you don't crave salt any more.

    • @Aboriginal_Alien
      @Aboriginal_Alien Год назад

      The body only need 1/10 of a teaspoon or 500 milligrams daily for all the amazing benefits salt has to offer the body.

    • @williamdahl1495
      @williamdahl1495 Год назад

      ​ @Aboriginal_Alien straight up wrong lil'bro

  • @jamesdrake9000
    @jamesdrake9000 3 года назад +20

    He talks like a person that's not all wacked out on uppers. Loved it. The next Ted talk will be on the dangers of long term high dose legal stimulant consumption. Yes that even means no more coffee.

    • @nubythefirst
      @nubythefirst 2 года назад

      I have to do a lover eeyou and

  • @jeffm.8134
    @jeffm.8134 3 года назад +13

    Would have been nice if they did a hair tissue mineral analysis before and after.

  • @山﨑大輔-o8u
    @山﨑大輔-o8u 7 лет назад +8

    It's very interesting story to break traditional Na-water concept. And I feel it's not slow for Japanese, non-native.

  • @bluecuracao6478
    @bluecuracao6478 Год назад +4

    Hey thank you, I noticed that salt doesn't directly add calories, but it makes me eating more food because of the flavor.
    I made an experiment today - I ate my porridge with salt and oil - as I usually do, and several hours later - just oil and porridge without salt.
    I tasted more plain but it still was tasty. And guess what - I consumed 2 times less and that was enough for me. As for the salt - it acts like a sauce - you eat more because of the flavor.
    And here is your video - now I know that digestion process, which makes our salt consumption also responsible for being overweight.
    Everybody knows about sugar, but there are few videos about salt.
    PS I also noticed that coffee consumption makes me eat more, but maybe it's just my specific thing, coffee makes my mind more chaotic

    • @christopherellis2663
      @christopherellis2663 Год назад

      Butter, not oil 🤮

    • @Horeman1999
      @Horeman1999 Месяц назад

      I know what u mean. But the reason salty food makes you eat more is because u r deficient of salt. U can think not salty food is not tasty, so u eat less. But eventually in the total amount, you will eat more because you need to take enough salt. I really know what u mean. Try eat very salty, u will notice that you will eat much less overall.

  • @walidak8229
    @walidak8229 2 года назад +9

    Advice before starting the video put it on 2X

  • @justinmontgomery9526
    @justinmontgomery9526 2 года назад +7

    The info he gives is too vague.
    He says they ate 20% more, but 20% more of what? I’d like to see the foods they’re given. Also he showed an 85 year old heart with hypertension, but what do his other Health markers look like?

  • @pravdanil
    @pravdanil 3 года назад +19

    it's a very important info, definitely deserves a much better presentation

  • @19993gt
    @19993gt 2 года назад +6

    I m 29 and I love salt. I’m obese. I’m 5’5” and weigh 300 lbs. I’m curious to see how I can implement salt into a healthier diet and be optimal.

    • @raymonortiz3084
      @raymonortiz3084 2 года назад +4

      Here's a clue. If your nutritional needs are complete in the ninety essential nutrients, your body will not bother you for food. Then you can begin to lose the excess weight.

    • @mamasshrimp422
      @mamasshrimp422 2 года назад +1

      Rid yourself of the processed food, beginning with flour and sugar. Look into the work of Dr. Joan Ifland, PhD. She is a food addiction expert who explains food addiction and why it is not our fault. Salt, sugar oil, gluten, dairy, should all be avoided, as they were purposely manipulated and added to processed foods and fast foods to get us addicted beginning at a young age, as well as our parent and grandparents. You can use salt as a sprinkling condiment, not to be added at every stage of cooking as professional chefs suggest. But you have to watch for the brand. Morton’s uses dextrose in their iodized salt which is a form of sugar, all intended to promote addiction.

    • @19993gt
      @19993gt 2 года назад +1

      @@mamasshrimp422 thank you I will👍🏾

    • @lintonmewi3720
      @lintonmewi3720 2 года назад +2

      The only diet you which you can eat salt and still deplete yourself of salt is the Keto diet..and carnivores diet too .

    • @19993gt
      @19993gt 2 года назад +1

      @@lintonmewi3720 ty for your advise

  • @Stuke51
    @Stuke51 3 года назад +36

    Don't blame salt for what the sugar did!

    • @Noeman2009
      @Noeman2009 Год назад

      High salt is no joke. For a person with a heart failure, too much salt means getting thirsty easily and crave for more water consumption. This result more water in plasma which will leak all over body that creates edema. Having edema you can't sleep like a normal person, you can only sleep while sitting. Trying to sleep laying down will level the water and creates breathing problem, you will gulp for air and get no good sleep. You can't eat normali since the disgestion track is also swelling.

    • @angelgregzion
      @angelgregzion 3 месяца назад +2

      They both are refined and problematic.

  • @artyomyer7087
    @artyomyer7087 Год назад +3

    This video changed my life

    • @davidmiletic6647
      @davidmiletic6647 Год назад

      How?

    • @artyomyer7087
      @artyomyer7087 Год назад +2

      @@davidmiletic6647 before of that I eat a lot of salt, and believed it can't be accumulated in the body ( the amount entered, is the amount goes out) which we see now is false, I stopped eating salt and after two years I see some improvements in my health.

    • @xploit811
      @xploit811 8 месяцев назад +1

      You don't salt your food at all?

    • @artyomyer7087
      @artyomyer7087 8 месяцев назад

      Yes, at all, it is hard especially dating my wife, or going outside with family or friends.
      The funny part is that I still have a lot of sodium in my body after two years!
      How do I know? Sorry for such details, my urine sodium is high, even today.@@xploit811

  • @influencefreedom
    @influencefreedom 3 года назад +17

    I would want to know what the sugar intakes were for this all.

  • @19993gt
    @19993gt 2 года назад +3

    I’ll read the comments for further clarification but can some one help break down the end? About energy retention and it’s correlation To salt?

    • @redragna3648
      @redragna3648 2 года назад

      If you eat too much salt, your liver needs energy to produce urea. For energy, your body will, through hunger, tell you that you need more calories or break down muscle tissue for it ion the absence of calories.

  • @thealphaman9
    @thealphaman9 Год назад +1

    How much salt was used in the experiment and what kind of salt?

  • @DougHNuts-ee3vn
    @DougHNuts-ee3vn 6 лет назад +34

    I got the opposite info from the YT channel "What I Learned", he's got like 8 videos on why low sodium diets CAUSE the health problems they are supposed to solve.

    • @keeproaring4736
      @keeproaring4736 3 года назад +9

      He exaggerates a lot of data in favour of his argument and berate the one against.
      Not very neutral

    • @Dan0rioN
      @Dan0rioN 3 года назад +8

      Yeah... So many "experts" have been flat out wrong over the years.. The way I see it is, a high salty meal=thirsty af=dehydrated af.. Try telling snails salt is hydrating lol

    • @justaman2659
      @justaman2659 2 года назад +1

      Salt is dehydrating. You only need a little bit salt in the diet.

    • @farmersmith7057
      @farmersmith7057 2 года назад +2

      @@justaman2659 actually not enough salt is also dehydrating. You need both sodium and potassium (electrolytes) to help water hydrate body cells.

    • @libertarianpunk8558
      @libertarianpunk8558 2 года назад

      @@justaman2659 that’s not true for everybody

  • @oculed1101
    @oculed1101 7 месяцев назад

    How does "produce more water in the body" happen

  • @sanchez21071994
    @sanchez21071994 7 лет назад +17

    Really interesting but this guy talks so slowly!

    • @fredhubbard7210
      @fredhubbard7210 7 лет назад +5

      Not so much slow speech, but so many pointless rhetorical questions.

    • @49.95-x7e
      @49.95-x7e 7 лет назад +8

      ran the video at 1.25 speed

    • @kathrynwitte3398
      @kathrynwitte3398 3 года назад +1

      How fast can you speak in Dutch?

    • @michaelheld7601
      @michaelheld7601 3 года назад +2

      Maybe i am a bit slower than you all but this was exactly the pace i could follow along. And with all these rhetorical questions he actually drew a clear path of his way to his findings. It's how our brain works. I could possibly explain 90% of this to a friend after watching this a single time. And imho: the real proof of having understood something fully is when you can explain it.
      However i can definitely agree that this form of explanation is probably not the most ideal way for everybody. ;)

    • @19993gt
      @19993gt 2 года назад

      So much anticipation

  • @antman674
    @antman674 3 года назад +10

    Not a whole lot of detail given on this experiment. Such as what did the rest of the subjects diets consist of? How did they control and deliver the sodium? How many meals were they eating? How many calories were they eating? How much water were they getting? Was salt the only thing they were testing? And what was this, 6 people? Not a very large group to make a geralization about salt intake or anything else for that matter. Would require much more testing and larger group sets to validate these results and determine an the exact mechanics of whats happening. And really its sugar you should be afraid of anyway.

    • @TheSimonsays85
      @TheSimonsays85 3 года назад +3

      I may have missed it, but I was curious if anti-gravity was part of the simulation and what other factors could have been correlated with muscle loss over the year.

    • @antman674
      @antman674 3 года назад

      @@TheSimonsays85 yes that too

  • @rayjones4951
    @rayjones4951 Год назад

    God sure knew what he was doing when he created the human body ! Wow!

  • @dukedex5043
    @dukedex5043 2 года назад

    Play at 1.5x speed to not fall asleep.

  • @jeanettenejadi1777
    @jeanettenejadi1777 Год назад

    which sort of salt was ist? Table salt NaCl? What about sea salt? Would be the effect different?

  • @xassassin609
    @xassassin609 Год назад

    Why does he say "A day or two" like that?

  • @cdogg82
    @cdogg82 Год назад

    This study is missing a lot of context. Is the sodium processed table salt or natural sea salt. Is the salt being consumed with processed foods or a healthy diet? Natural sea salt consumed with healthy-unprocessed food is not an issue (as a healthy diet contains potassium which balances the sodium). The issue is consuming processed table salt along with processed food. I would imagine astronauts are eating processed foods as fresh food is not available in space or a contained space.

  • @m.3533
    @m.3533 2 года назад +1

    Can someone to help to understand
    I have high blood pressure , and always eat salty food ( cant eat without salt ) , in some way craving for salt , on other hand i drinking too much water like 6-8 l ( 1.5-2 gallons ) , too many times go to pee.
    Does too much water cause my low sodium that crave for salt or my high intake sodium cause drinking too much water and remove my soidum and electrolytes ?, what overwhelmeing my kidneys ? Solution ? Thank you

    • @m.3533
      @m.3533 2 года назад

      its a table salt , a will switch to the Himalay .
      Thx for answer

    • @artyomyer7087
      @artyomyer7087 2 года назад

      Not eating salt lowered my blood pressure, and saved my sleep, maybe potassium is also an answer

  • @jonnyfranco7
    @jonnyfranco7 7 лет назад +7

    i think hes missing the hormonal change when including diet cause calorie restriction in small multpile meals perday can eat muscle as well.

  • @baslielalene4702
    @baslielalene4702 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @ocircles738
    @ocircles738 Год назад +1

    Getting heavy Roman chancellor vibes from this guy

  • @joeroganpodfantasy42
    @joeroganpodfantasy42 3 года назад +7

    The last takeaway point was really important , taking sodium Na , makes our body skip on the fats that we eat , so the body needs another source so it uses our muscles.

    • @Wolfsgejaule
      @Wolfsgejaule 3 года назад +1

      Only if you don't eat enough.

    • @tomibadboi
      @tomibadboi Год назад +2

      only if you're in zero G. smh

  • @xlilxillx
    @xlilxillx 3 года назад +6

    what KIND of salt might be important to mention...ya know, refined...unrefined...

    • @mikeb3315
      @mikeb3315 3 года назад +3

      Sea salt, kosher salt... However many there are... Good point.
      Maybe he's just talking about salt from McDonald's food!

    • @Jack-er6wi
      @Jack-er6wi 3 года назад +3

      There’s no difference between salt types that would affect any of the processes here.

    • @jdizzle9011
      @jdizzle9011 3 года назад +3

      No such thing as refined salt like only refined sugar. Salt is salt.

    • @1000_Dominoes
      @1000_Dominoes 3 года назад +1

      @@Jack-er6wi I beg to differ. There definitely IS a difference between the types of salt used, and unfortunately, this is where this talk falls short because it makes no distinction between good salt and bad. Unrefined sea salt can do what salt it supposed to do in the body. Refined salt, which is bleached and has added anti-caking agents, cannot do what it is supposed to do in the body, which is to absorb and attract water. When anti-caking agents are added for the express purpose of making it NOT attract water, which would cause it to clump together, the salt is worthless. It can no longer do its job. It is this salt that sits around worthless in the body, causing water to accumulate in places where it shouldn't, causing all kinds of edema issues and more.

    • @eronackerman565
      @eronackerman565 2 года назад

      I was wondering what difference iodized salt makes. Having not enough iodine can give people thyroid disorders. Neither sea salt nor kosher salt has iodine, and it’s not naturally occurring in many foods (mainly sea foods and yogurt, I think). So, I wonder if more people have become iodine deficient since those salts have become more common dietary staples.

  • @19993gt
    @19993gt 2 года назад

    Wait hold up.,,, what? I came here assuming water conservation was a cause of salt . Not salt was related to water excretion

    • @redragna3648
      @redragna3648 2 года назад

      You are looking at this in the short instead of long term.

  • @19993gt
    @19993gt 2 года назад

    I’m sure this conversation went for one or two days.

  • @christopherellis2663
    @christopherellis2663 Год назад

    Sodium is not the same thing as salt. Not all salts have sodium.

  • @wilimelano
    @wilimelano 2 года назад

    too slow, watch at 1.5x speed

  • @david_oliveira71
    @david_oliveira71 Год назад +4

    Everyone who reads this: I highly recommend *Dr James DiNicolantonio* and this interview also on YT: Why You Need More Salt in Your Diet

  • @ericpham4011
    @ericpham4011 4 года назад +2

    It is the salt itself but the quality behind it is troubling. The blood in our system is seriously Scarry. MRI and Light can evaporate our body and reassemble or make light out of it and that is the future way of burrial in light. I had complete design

  • @ratnarakshitwankhede9328
    @ratnarakshitwankhede9328 3 года назад +3

    Best Ted Talk Ever.

  • @plant-based-nutrition
    @plant-based-nutrition 2 года назад

    I know exactly how much salt is in my breakfast. Maybe you shouldn't be on that stage... 🙄

  • @swingcountryarizona2351
    @swingcountryarizona2351 Год назад

    What does “high” salt diet mean? How much? In America we’re so scared of salt they’ve taken it out of everything. If you’re not eating fast food or processed food and you are eating a whole food plant based fiat then where is the salt coming from. Can you get enough salt from plants and vegetables?? Or meat that has no salt in it. What if those men are active abd sweating or living in a hot environment for weeks on end. Say 98+ degrees during the “day”. Is there any case where it’s very important to supplement with various salt’s. If I were watching this and learning about sly for the fiat time I would take away that salt is bad period end of story. Not a fan.

  • @akbarshoed
    @akbarshoed 2 года назад +2

    Have NO IDEA what this guy is talking about or where he's coming from. He's as far off as is possible. Salt makes you LESS hungry. Salt will NOT lead to increased muscle wasting. Any discussion about water retention or diabetes must center around insulin levels, NOT Salt levels.

  • @vitorpsr
    @vitorpsr 6 лет назад +5

    info might be ok but lecturer is horrendous

  • @hassansyed5661
    @hassansyed5661 3 года назад +4

    Sodium consumption is dangerous

    • @portalhaus7510
      @portalhaus7510 2 года назад +2

      Bhahahahaha

    • @farmersmith7057
      @farmersmith7057 2 года назад +8

      Lack of sodium consumption is lethal.

    • @epiphosion608
      @epiphosion608 2 года назад +2

      its an essential nutrient , if ur cramping, anxious brain fog, disconnected ur broably low, ,,,,,,,,,,bloated , high blood pressure , headaches prob high ,,cotta find ur own sweet spot and adjust for heat and exercise ect

    • @brewtality_
      @brewtality_ 2 года назад +2

      Problem is in the chloride form, not the sodium i guess?

    • @20KAYSUBS
      @20KAYSUBS 2 года назад

      @@farmersmith7057 if you live in america theres no such think as low sodiuum consuption

  • @ElHolyBoy
    @ElHolyBoy 2 года назад

    🤣